Post-rationalism : psychoanalysis, epistemology, and Marxism in post-war France
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Bibliographic Information
Post-rationalism : psychoanalysis, epistemology, and Marxism in post-war France
(Bloomsbury studies in continental philosophy)
Bloomsbury, 2013
- : hb
- : pb
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Note
Pb: "First published 2013. (c) Tom Eyers 2013, 2015"--T.p. verso. Bibliography: p. [205]-212
Includes bibliographical references (p. [205]-211) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Post-Rationalism takes the experimental journal of psychoanalysis and philosophy, Cahiers pour l'Analyse, as its main source. Established by students of Louis Althusser in 1966, the journal has rarely figured in the literature, although it contained the first published work of authors now famous in contemporary critical thought, including Alain Badiou, Jean-Claude Milner, Luce Irigaray, Andre Green and Jacques-Alain Miller. The Cahiers served as a testing ground for the combination of diverse intellectual sources indicative of the period, including the influential reinvention of Freud and Marx undertaken by Lacan and Althusser, and the earlier post-rationalist philosophy of science pioneered by Gaston Bachelard, Georges Canguilhem and Alexandre Koyre.
This book is a wide-ranging analysis of the intellectual foundations of structuralism, re-connecting the work of young post-Lacanian and post-Althusserian theorists with their predecessors in French philosophy of science. Tom Eyers provides an important corrective to standard histories of the period, focussing on the ways in which French epistemological writing of the 1930s and 1940s - especially that of Bachelard and Canguilhem - laid the ground for the emergence of structuralism in the 1950s and 1960s, thus questioning the standard historical narrative that posits structuralism as emerging chiefly in reaction to phenomenology and existentialism.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements \ Introduction \ 1. Psychoanalytic Structuralism in the Cahiers pour l'Analyse \ 2. Bachelard, Lacan and the Impurity of Formalization \ 3. Science, 'Suture' and the Signifier \ 4. Discourse and Ideology in Post-Rationalism: Althusser, Badiou, Lacan, Milner \ 5. Canguilhem, Deleuze and the Problem of Life \ Conclusion \ Bibliography \ Index
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