The Adventure of French Philosophy is essential reading for anyone interested in what Badiou calls the French Moment in contemporary thought.
Badiou explores the exceptionally rich and varied world of French philosophy in a number of groundbreaking essays, published here for the first time in English or in a revised translation. Included are the often-quoted review of Louis Althusser's canonical works
For Marx and
Reading Capital and the scathing critique of "potato fascism" in Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari's
A Thousand Plateaus. There are also talks on Michel Foucault and Jean-Luc Nancy, and reviews of the work of Jean-François Lyotard and Barbara Cassin, notable points of interest on an expansive tour of modern French thought.
Guided by a small set of fundamental questions concerning the nature of being, the event, the subject, and truth, Badiou pushes to an extreme the polemical force of his thinking. Against the formless continuum of life, he posits the need for radical discontinuity; against the false modesty of finitude, he pleads for the mathematical infinity of everyday situations; against the various returns to Kant, he argues for the persistence of the Hegelian dialectic; and against the lure of ultraleftism, his texts from the 1970s vindicate the role of Maoism as a driving force behind the communist Idea.
Author: Alain BadiouPublisher: Verso
Published: 03/01/2022
Pages: 432
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.85lbs
Size: 8.19h x 5.51w x 1.10d
ISBN13: 9781788736534
ISBN10: 1788736532
BISAC Categories:-
Philosophy |
History & Surveys | Modern-
Philosophy |
Movements | Post-Structuralism-
Philosophy |
Movements | Critical TheoryAbout the Author
Alain Badiou teaches philosophy at the École normale supérieure and the Collège international de philosophie in Paris. In addition to several novels, plays and political essays, he has published a number of major philosophical works, including Theory of the Subject, Being and Event, Manifesto for Philosophy, and Gilles Deleuze. His recent books include The Meaning of Sarkozy, Ethics, Metapolitics, Polemics, The Communist Hypothesis, Five Lessons on Wagner, and Wittgenstein's Anti-Philosophy.
Bruno Bosteels, Professor of Romance Studies at Cornell University, is the author of
Badiou and Politics, Marx and Freud in Latin America, and
The Actuality of Communism. He is also the translator of several books by Alain Badiou:
Theory of the Subject, Can Politics Be Thought? and
What Is Antiphilosophy? Essays on Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Lacan. He currently serves as the General Editor of
Diacritics.