The nights of labor : the workers' dream in nineteenth-century France

Bibliographic Information

The nights of labor : the workers' dream in nineteenth-century France

Jacques Rancière ; translated from the French by John Drury ; with an introduction by Donald Reid

Temple University Press, 1989

Other Title

Nuit des prolétaires

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Note

Translation of: La nuit des prolétaires

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Originally published in France in 1981, this first English translation of "Les Nuits des Proletaires" dramatically reinterprets the Revolution of 1830, contending that workers were not rebelling against specific hardships and conditions but against the unyielding predetermination of their lives. Through a study of worker-run newspapers, letters, journals, and worker-poetry, Ranciere reveals the contradictory and conflicting stories that challenge the coherence of these statements celebrating labor. Nineteenth-century workers sought out proletarian intellectuals, poets, and artists who were able to articulate their longings. At night, these worker-intellectuals gathered to write journals, poems, music, letters, and to discuss issues.The worker diatribes they composed served the purpose of escape from their daily worker lives. Unwilling to give in to sleep at night to repair the body for more manual labor, these 'migrants who moved at the borders between classes' regarded the night as their real life. They sought to appropriate for themselves the night of those who could stay awake and the language of those who did not have to beg. Once these workers and those whom they represented had glimpsed other lives, they fought for the possibility of living other lives.Thus, Ranciere disregards 'the majestic masses' and concentrates instead on the words and fantasies of a few dozen 'non representative' individuals those who performed the radical act of breaking down the time-honored barrier separating those who carried out useful labor from those who pondered aesthetics. "The Nights of Labor" incorporates the post-structuralist insistence on the production of meaning as a dynamic, conflictual process. Ranciere's method shares a common strategy with the deconstructionist technique of locating points in the text that reveal contradictions engendered by the suppression of 'writing'. In choosing to deconstruct the proletariat, Ranciere exposes its conflicts and strategies of containment. Jacques Ranciere, known as an early disciple of Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser, teaches philosophy at the Universite de Paris VIII. He co-authored "Lire le Capital" and founded the journal, "Les Revoltes Logiques".

Table of Contents

Author's Preface Acknowledgments Introduction Donald Reid Part I: The Man in the Leather Apron 1. The Gate of Hell 2. The Gate of Heaven 3. The New Babylon 4. Circuit Rounds and Spirals 5. The Morning Star Part II: The Broken Plane 6. The Army of Work 7. The Lovers of Humanity 8. The Hammer and the Anvil 9. The Holes of the Temple Part III: The Christian Hercules 10. The Interrupted Banquet 11. The Republic of Work 12. The Journey of Icarus Epilogue: The Night of October Outline Chronology

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