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We think of the Enlightenment as an era dominated by ideas of
progress, production, and industry--not an era that favored the lax
and indolent individual. But was the Enlightenment only about the
unceasing improvement of self and society? "The Pursuit of
Laziness" examines moral, political, and economic treatises of the
period, and reveals that crucial eighteenth-century texts did find
value in idleness and nonproductivity. Fleshing out Enlightenment
thinking in the works of Denis Diderot, Joseph Joubert, Pierre de
Marivaux, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Jean-Simeon Chardin, this book
explores idleness in all its guises, and illustrates that laziness
existed, not as a vice of the wretched, but as an exemplar of
modernity and a resistance to beliefs about virtue and utility.
Whether in the dawdlings of Marivaux's journalist who delayed
and procrastinated or in the subjects of Chardin's paintings who
delighted in suspended, playful time, Pierre Saint-Amand shows how
eighteenth-century works provided a strong argument for laziness.
Rousseau abandoned his previous defense of labor to pursue reverie
and botanical walks, Diderot emphasized a parasitic strategy of
resisting work in order to liberate time, and Joubert's
little-known posthumous Notebooks radically opposed the central
philosophy of the Enlightenment in a quest to infinitely postpone
work.
Unsettling the stubborn view of the eighteenth century as an age
of frenetic industriousness and labor, "The Pursuit of Laziness"
plumbs the texts and images of the time and uncovers deliberate
yearnings for slowness and recreation."
A major participant in the influential Tel Quel group in France,
Jean-Joseph Goux here offers a bold reevaluation of both the
Marxist economic model and the Freudian concept of the unconscious.
Symbolic Economies makes available for the first time in English
generous selections from Goux's Freud, Marx: Economie et symbolique
(1973) and Les iconoclastes (1978). Goux brings the theories of
historical materialism and of psychoanalysis into play to
illuminate and enrich each other, and undertakes a compelling
integration of the contributions of structuralism and
post-structuralism. Looking closely at the work of such major
figures as Lacan, Derrida, and Nietzsche, Goux extends the
implications of Marxism and Freudianism to an interdisciplinary
semiotics of value and proposes a radical concept of exchange.
Literary theorists, philosophers, social scientists, cultural
historians, and feminist critics alike will welcome this important
and provocative work.
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