Skip to product information
1 of 1

What Is a People?

Regular price $25.00
Sale price $25.00 Regular price $25.00
Sale Sold out
Rethinking the terms we use to define a people.
  • Format:
  • 03 May 2016
View Product Details

What Is a People? seeks to reclaim "people" as an effective political concept by revisiting its uses and abuses over time. Alain Badiou surveys the idea of a people as a productive force of solidarity and emancipation and as a negative tool of categorization and suppression. Pierre Bourdieu follows with a sociolinguistic analysis of "popular" and its transformation of democracy, beliefs, songs, and even soups into phenomena with outsized importance. Judith Butler calls out those who use freedom of assembly to create an exclusionary "we," while Georges Didi-Huberman addresses the problem of summing up a people with totalizing narratives. Sadri Khiari applies an activist's perspective to the racial hierarchies inherent in ethnic and national categories, and Jacques Rancière comments on the futility of isolating theories of populism when, as these thinkers have shown, the idea of a "people" is too diffuse to support them. By engaging this topic linguistically, ethnically, culturally, and ontologically, the voices in this volume help separate "people" from its fraught associations to pursue more vital formulations.

Together with Democracy in What State?, in which Giorgio Agamben, Alain Badiou, Daniel Bensaid, Wendy Brown, Jean-Luc Nancy, Jacques Rancière, Kristin Ross, and Slavoj Žižek discuss the nature and purpose of democracy today, What Is a People? expands an essential exploration of political action and being in our time.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $25.00
Pages: 176
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: New Directions in Critical Theory
Publication Date: 03 May 2016
Trim Size: 8.25 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9780231168762
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

PHILOSOPHY / Movements / Critical Theory, PHILOSOPHY / Political, POLITICAL SCIENCE / History & Theory, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Essays

This exciting and provocative collection of essays reflects on the exclusionary perils and emancipatory potentialities of the concept of 'people' and its myriad cognates: popular, peoples, populism, and so forth. With contributions from leading philosophers and social theorists from France, Tunisia, and the United States, What is a People? is a must-read for anyone interested in cutting-edge work in the tradition of French and Francophone critical theory.
Alain Badiou (PhD, Philosophy, Ecole Normale Superieure) holds the Rene Descartes Chair at the European Graduate School; he also teaches at the Ecole Normale Superieure and the College International de Philosophie in Paris. He is the author of several successful novels and plays as well as more than a dozen philosophical works, including his masterwork, Being and Event (Continuum, 2007), and several Columbia titles, includng Plato's Republic (2013) and Jacques Lacan Past and Present (2016).

Preface
Introduction: This People Which Is Not One, by Bruno Bosteels
1. Twenty-Four Notes on the Uses of the Word "People", by Alain Badiou
2. You Said "Popular"?, by Pierre Bourdieu
3. "We, the People": Thoughts on Freedom of Assembly, by Judith Butler
4. To Render Sensible, by Georges Didi-Huberman
5. The People and the Third People, by Sadri Khiari
6. The Populism That Is Not to Be Found, by Jacques Rancière
Conclusion: Fragile Collectivities, Imagined Sovereignties, by Kevin Olson
Notes
Index