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French thinkers such as Lacan and Derrida are often labelled as
representatives of 'poststructuralism' in the Anglophone world.
However in France, where their work originated, they use no such
category; this group of theorists - 'the poststructuralists' - were
never perceived as a coherent intellectual group or movement.
Outlining the institutional contexts, affinities, and rivalries of,
among others, Althusser, Barthes, Foucault, Irigaray, and Kristeva,
Angermuller - drawing from Bourdieu's concepts of cultural capital
and the academic field - insightfully explores post-structuralism
as a phenomenon. By tracing the evolution of the French
intellectual field after the war, Why There is No Poststructuralism
in France places French Theory both in the specific material
conditions of its production and the social and historical contexts
of its reception, accounting for a particularly creative moment in
French intellectual life which continues to inform the theoretical
imaginary of our time.
This book examines career patterns of the professoriate. Professors
may appear as specialised individualists in their fields, and yet
they follow pathways which are anything but unique. Drawing from a
unique data set, the authors analyse the trajectories of the almost
2000 linguists and sociologists who hold full professorships in
Germany, France and the UK in 2015. With a background in
social theory, they reveal models, structures and rules that
organise the professional lives and biographies of the most senior
academics. This book presents the results of a systematic empirical
study, which will be of interest to specialists in higher education
studies as well as to linguists and sociologists, and to all
academics more generally.
This volume addresses the manifold conjunctures, interactions and
disjunctures that occur at various levels of what has come to be
rubricated under the buzzword of "globalization." While this term
has the merit of reperiodizing our account of the capitalist
dynamics, it simultaneously points to a crisis of representation
both in political and epistemological terms. The contributions
collected in this volume - being reflexive representations from the
social sciences and humanities - assess some of the manifold
aspects of this crisis.
French thinkers such as Lacan and Derrida are often labelled as
representatives of 'poststructuralism' in the Anglophone world.
However in France, where their work originated, they use no such
category; this group of theorists - 'the poststructuralists' - were
never perceived as a coherent intellectual group or movement.
Outlining the institutional contexts, affinities, and rivalries of,
among others, Althusser, Barthes, Foucault, Irigaray, and Kristeva,
Angermuller - drawing from Bourdieu's concepts of cultural capital
and the academic field - insightfully explores post-structuralism
as a phenomenon. By tracing the evolution of the French
intellectual field after the war, Why There is No Poststructuralism
in France places French Theory both in the specific material
conditions of its production and the social and historical contexts
of its reception, accounting for a particularly creative moment in
French intellectual life which continues to inform the theoretical
imaginary of our time.
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