Introduction: Jacques Rancière: Penseur de l'envers / Gabriel
Rockhill and Phil Watts
Part One: History
1. Historicizing Untimeliness / Kristen Ross
2. The Lessons of Jacques Rancière: Knowledge and Power after the
Storm / Alain Badiou
3. Sophisticated Continuities and Historical Discontinuities, Or,
Why Not Protagoras? / Eric Méchoulan
4. The Classics and Critical Theory in Postmodern France: The Case
of Jacques Rancière / Giuseppina Mecchia
5. Rancière and Metaphysics / Jean-Luc Nancy
Part Two: Politics
6. What is Political Philosophy? Contextual Notes / Étienne
Balibar
7. Rancière in South Carolina / Todd May
8. Political Agency and the Ambivalence of the Sensible / Yves
Citton
9. Staging Equality: Rancière's Theatrocracy and the Limits of
Anarchic Equality / Peter Hallward
10. Rancière's Leftism, Or, Politics and Its Discontents / Bruno
Bosteels
11. Jacques Rancière's Ethical Turn and the Thinking of Discontents
/ Solange Guénoun
Part Three. Aesthetics
12. The Politics of Aesthetics: Political History and the
Hermeneutics of Art / Gabriel Rockhill
13. Cinema and Its Discontents / Tom Conley
14. Politicizing Art in Rancière and Deleuze: The Case of
Postcolonial Literature / Raji Vallury
15. Impossible Speech Acts: Jacques Rancière's Erich Auerbach /
Andrew Parker
16. Style indirect libre / James Swenson
Afterword: The Method of Equality: An Answer to Some Questions /
Jacques Rancière
Collection that examines the work of cultural and political theorist Jacques Ranciere
Garbiel Rockhill is an assistant professor of philosophy at Villanova University. He is edited and translated Jacques Rancière’s The Politics of Aesthetics. Philip Watts is an associate professor of French at Columbia University. He is the author of Allegories of the Purge: How Literature Responded to the Postwar Trials of Writers and Intellectuals in France.
Philip Watts is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of French and Romance Philology at Columbia University. He is the author of Allegories of the Purge.
"In his contribution to this excellent edited volume, Alain Badiou situates the development of Jacques Rancie're's thought in the intellectual milieu of 1960s France. The defining issue that had emerged in this context concerned the relation between intellectual authority and social action, that is, the problem of transmission of revolutionary experience. Badiou outlines how Rancie're has engaged in a 'struggle on two fronts' in developing a response to this problem... This book draws together 16 critical responses to Rancie' re's work, which emerged from conferences held at the University of Pittsburgh and the Centre Culturel International de Cerisy la Salle in 2005. The book is organized around Ranciere's contribution to history, politics and aesthetics." - Andrew Schaap, Contemporary Political Theory "It contextualises Ranciere's work in a way that one cannot achieve through reading him directly, offering a companion to his core writings. In addition nearly all of the pieces infuse Ranciere's work with a sense of urgency and timelessness that can often be lost in volumes focused on a single thinker... Impressive and much-needed discussion of Ranciere's thought and should prove invaluable to those with an interest in his work." Roger Glover, Political Studies Review, January 2012 "What makes this volume the book that everyone interested in Jacques Ranciere has to have is its incomparable roster of contributors. Ranciere himself sets a standard of intellectual seriousness, and the contributors honour him by wrestling strenuously with his thought. They illuminate the trajectory of that thought and the connections between the historian of class and the philosopher of equality, the thinker of politics and the thinker of aesthetics. You can see why Ranciere is one of the few French thinkers creating an ever greater excitement in North America." Bruce Robbins, author of Upward Mobility and the Common Good: Toward a Literary History of the Welfare State "This timely collection of essays should finally jump-start the English-speaking conversation about the work of Jacques Ranciere, one of the most innovative political philosophers now writing. His method of equality, his contrast of a stable 'police' order with 'the political' as an interruption of that order by those invisible within it, and his idea that both politics and art involve modes of distributing/partitioning the sensible together form a unique constellation of radical political thinking."--J. M. Bernstein, New School for Social Research
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