Modern French Philosophy
Vincent Descombes author L Scott-Fox translator J M Harding translator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:29th Jan '81
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A critical introduction to modern French philosoophy, from one of the liveliest contemporary practitioners.
This is a critical introduction to modern French philosophy, commissioned from one of the liveliest contemporary practitioners and intended for an English-speaking readership. Vincent Descombes offers here a personal guide to the main movements and figures of the last forty-five years.This is a critical introduction to modern French philosophy, commissioned from one of the liveliest contemporary practitioners and intended for an English-speaking readership. The dominant 'Anglo-Saxon' reaction to philosophical development in France has for some decades been one of suspicion, occasionally tempered by curiosity but more often hardening into dismissive rejection. But there are signs now of a more sympathetic interest and an increasing readiness to admit and explore shared concerns, even if these are still expressed in a very different idiom and intellectual context. Vincent Descombes offers here a personal guide to the main movements and figures of the last forty-five years. He traces over this period the evolution of thought from a generation preoccupied with the 'three H's' - Hegel, Husserl and Heidegger, to a generation influenced since about 1960 by the 'three masters of suspicion' - Marx, Nietzsche and Freud. In this framework he deals in turn with the thought of Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, the early structuralists, Foucault, Althusser, Serres, Derrida, and finally Deleuze and Lyotard. The 'internal' intellectual history of the period is related to its institutional setting and the wider cultural and political context which has given French philosophy so much of its distinctive character.
ISBN: 9780521296724
Dimensions: 215mm x 139mm x 18mm
Weight: 251g
208 pages