03873nam 22005531 450 991079763610332120151006173837.01-4742-2633-71-4742-2631-010.5040/9781474226332(CKB)3710000000486236(EBL)4397481(MiAaPQ)EBC4397481(OCoLC)944225632(UtOrBLW)bpp09259529(EXLCZ)99371000000048623620151012d2015 uy 0engur|n|---|||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierWhy there is no poststructuralism in France the making of an intellectural generation /Johannes AngermullerLondon ;Oxford ;New York :Bloomsbury Academic,2015.1 online resource (144 p.)Bloomsbury Studies in Continental PhilosophyA French version of Chapters 1-4 has been published in Le Champ de la Théorie: Essor et déclin du structuralisme en France, Angermuller, Johannes (Paris: Hermann, 2013).1-350-09447-1 1-4742-2630-2 Includes bibliographical references and index.Preface -- 1 Introduction: the intellectual field in France -- 1.1 'Poststructuralism' - an international misunderstanding? -- 1.2 Structuralism and post-structuralism in intellectual sociology of intellectuals -- 2. Structuralism versus post-structuralism. The birth of an intellectual generation -- 2.1 The transformations of Theory. From structuralism to 'poststructuralism' -- 2.2 Why there is no poststructuralism in France. Foucault, Derrida & Co. in the French intellectual field -- 2.2.1 Theoretical lines of conflict. Structuralists and ex-, non- and anti-structuralists -- 2.2.2 The arena of political conflict: the Communist Party and '68 -- 2.2.3 Schools, clans, networks -- 2.2.4 Disciplinary cleavages between the human sciences and philosophy -- 2.2.5 Alternative education routes: elite academics versus colorful résumés -- 2.2.6 Peripheral institutions against the academic center -- 3 Rise and decline of the structuralist generation -- 3.1 From modernity to postmodernity: the intellectual field since the Enlightenment -- 3.2 The boom of the human sciences in the 1960s and 1970s -- 3.3 The formation of the structuralist generation -- 3.4 The neoliberal turn of the 1980s -- 4 From Theory in France to French Theory: the making of 'poststructuralism' in the post-national university -- 5 The Moment of Theory: the Social After Society -- Notes -- References -- Index."French thinkers such as Foucault and Derrida are often labelled as representatives of 'poststructuralism.'Yet such an intellectual movement is unknown in France, where these theorists were never perceived as an intellectual group or movement. By tracing the evolution of the French intellectual field after the war, this monograph places Theory in the social and historical contexts of its reception. It thus accounts for a particularly productive moment in French intellectual life which continues to inform the theoretical imaginary of our time."--Bloomsbury Publishing.Translated into English by Walter Allmand and Johannes Angermuller.Bloomsbury Studies in Continental PhilosophyPhilosophyFrancePoststructuralismFranceStructuralismHistoryHistory of Western philosophyPhilosophyPoststructuralismStructuralismHistory.401.4109Angermuller Johannes1113404UtOrBLWUtOrBLWBOOK9910797636103321Why there is no poststructuralism in France3823753UNINA