It is time to re-examine the French Revolution as a political resource. The historiography has so far ignored the question of popular sovereignty and emancipation; instead the Revolution has been vilified as a matrix of totalitarianisms by the liberals and as an ethnocentric phenomenon by postcolonial studies. This book examines why.
It is time to re-examine the French Revolution as a political resource. The historiography has so far ignored the question of popular sovereignty and emancipation; instead the Revolution has been vilified as a matrix of totalitarianisms by the liberals and as an ethnocentric phenomenon by postcolonial studies. This book examines why.
Introduction - The French Revolution is Not a Myth: Sartre, Lévi- Strauss, Foucault, Lacan and us Part I Chapter one - How did the French Revolution become a Sartrean object? Chapter two - Working with historical details against the fetishizing of reality Chapter three - Do not dissolve the real men of the French Revolution in a bath of sulfuric acid Chapter four - Restoring the sacred to its place Chapter five- Apocalypse and Fraternity-Terror Chapter six - The question of dialectical time and the futility of the notion of rearguard Part II Chapter seven - Three humanities in one, Europeans, colonized, savages Chapter eight - Conclude a book, conclude a discussion Chapter nine - Michel Foucault and the French Revolution: a misunderstanding? Chapter ten - The French Revolution in between archaeologies of knowledge, discourse formations, and social formations Chapter eleven - Surrounding the Iranian revolution, retrieving the missed object with Foucault, in spite of Fouc
Introduction - The French Revolution is Not a Myth: Sartre, Lévi- Strauss, Foucault, Lacan and us Part I Chapter one - How did the French Revolution become a Sartrean object? Chapter two - Working with historical details against the fetishizing of reality Chapter three - Do not dissolve the real men of the French Revolution in a bath of sulfuric acid Chapter four - Restoring the sacred to its place Chapter five- Apocalypse and Fraternity-Terror Chapter six - The question of dialectical time and the futility of the notion of rearguard Part II Chapter seven - Three humanities in one, Europeans, colonized, savages Chapter eight - Conclude a book, conclude a discussion Chapter nine - Michel Foucault and the French Revolution: a misunderstanding? Chapter ten - The French Revolution in between archaeologies of knowledge, discourse formations, and social formations Chapter eleven - Surrounding the Iranian revolution, retrieving the missed object with Foucault, in spite of Fouc
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