Translator's Preface 1. A lesson in orthodoxy: M.L. teaches John Lewis that the masses make history 2. A lesson in politics: philosophers do not become kings 3. A lesson in self-criticism: class struggle rages in theory 4. A lesson in history: the damages of humanism 5. A discourse in its place 6. For the record: on the theory of ideology (1969) Index.
The first English translation of Jacques Rancière's first book, in which he explores and begins to move beyond the thought of his mentor, Louis Althusser.
Jacques Rancière taught at the University of Paris VIII,
France, from 1969 to 2000, occupying the Chair of Aesthetics
and Politics from 1990 until his retirement.
Emiliano Battista is the translator of Jacques Rancière's
Althusser's Lesson (Continuum, 2011) and Film Fables (Berg, 2006).
This precise and elegant translation of Jacques Rancière's first
book will be of keen interest to those seeking to understand
Rancière's thought as well as the development of French philosophy
during the 1970s. It will also be of help to those working to
reanimate politics through a thorough questioning of its guiding
assumptions. In this short, fiery, and at points moving text, one
sees Rancière's own positions begin to take root as this highly
original thinker comes to grips with the legacy of his mentor,
Louis Althusser. Joseph J. Tanke, University of Hawaii
*Joseph J. Tanke*
... if one wishes to understand the seeds of [Rancière's
significant contributions to contemporary political thought] and
the times in which they were germinating, Althusser's Lesson offers
as good a first-hand account as one could ask for.
*Notre Dame Philosophical Review*
'Emiliano Battista's translation is excellent: readable, judicious
in its decisions, and attentive to the complex terminological
terrain of the theoretical and political field into which
Rancière's book intervened. The translator's notes are a helpful
guide to this context.'
*Radical Philosophy*
Rancière tells a compelling story about the political effects both
deliberate and unintentional of the relationship between academic
Marxist discourse, institutional left politics, and the iconic mass
rebellion of nine million workers that would later be known as 'the
beginning of the end' of radical French leftism...Rancière's
reflections [...] open the space for a critical and politically
sensitive dialogue between professors, theorists, activists,
students, and workers over the political space which the university
has time and time again proven itself to be. Moreover, it forces
academic Marxists to consider their generally passive position in
relation to these protests.
*Marx and Philosophy Review of Books*
A lesson, like a letter, is delivered to someone, to a recipient
... in a specific time and place and, in written form, may like a
letter be delayed, so delayed in fact that it misses the
addressee...Sometimes a letter does reach its destination.
*Cultural Critique 83, Winter 2013*
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