From Revolution to Restoration?

Similar documents
The Holy See ADDRESS OF POPE JOHN PAUL II TO BISHOPS OF CANADA ON THEIR «AD LIMINA APOSTOLORUM» VISIT. Friday, 23 September 1983

Mister Minister and President of the Administrative Council, Íñigo Méndez de Vigo;

Editor s Introduction

Political Science 103 Fall, 2018 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

UNIVERSITY of MAURITIUS Vice Chancellor s Speech

The Challenge of Rousseau

NOTES ON BEING AND EVENT (PART 4)

Emile s Quest on Religion and Modern Politics. Emile Perreau Saussine s death is a tragedy for his family and all those who loved him,

What is Atheism? How is Atheism Defined?: Who Are Atheists? What Do Atheists Believe?:

Stories to Ponder. for Reading and Understanding English. Marthe Blanchet

J. Aaron Simmons and Bruce Ellis Benson, The New Phenomenology: A Philosophical Introduction (New York: Bloomsbury, 2013)

Equality and Value-holism

History 1324: French Social Thought From Durkheim to Foucault Prof. Peter E. Gordon Department of History Harvard University

mohammed arkoun 4366BB5CACFDAF3D728A76D175C21AB9 Mohammed Arkoun 1 / 6

Men, Lift Up Holy Hands! a Sermon on 1Tim. 2:8 by Scott Lindsay

Office hours: MWF 10:20-11:00; TuTh 2:15-3:00 Office: Johns 111JA Phone: Christianity and Politics

EUROPEAN POLITICAL THEORY: ROUSSEAU AND AFTER

FROM THE PEOPLE TO THE PUBLIC

FIRST STUDY. The Existential Dialectical Basic Assumption of Kierkegaard s Analysis of Despair

Has Ecocentrism Already Won in France?

The Heritage of Lincoln

QUERIES: to be answered by AUTHOR

SWORN STATEMENT ("DÉCLARATION ASSERMENTÉE")

Paper 1: Justice Must Be Seen To Be Done : Organisational Justice And Islamic Headscarf And Burqa Laws In France. Nicky Jones INTRODUCTION

Meta-Debate: A necessity for any debate style.

Affirmative Dialectics: from Logic to Anthropology

ANNEXE TABLE DES MATIÈRES. Date : Demandeur : M. Franco Baldino. No. dossier du Syndic : CDM Syndic : Me Pierre Despatis

THE HISTORY OF MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT Wednesdays 6-8:40 p.m.

ON SARTRE S RÉFLEXIONS SUR LA QUESTION JUIVE (1946) AND ITS POSTERITY

University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of History Spring Lecturer: Hunter Martin Lectures: MWF 12:05-12:55

Précis of Democracy and Moral Conflict

University of Aberdeen. Anthropology contra ethnography Ingold, Timothy. Published in: Hau: Journal of Ethnographic Theory. DOI: /hau7.1.

Portfolio Project. Phil 251A Logic Fall Due: Friday, December 7

The Age of Exploration led people to believe that truth had yet to be discovered The Scientific Revolution questioned accepted beliefs and witnessed

ON THE POVERTY OF STUDENT LIFE

ANNALI THE LETTER TO THE HEBREWS EARLY CHRISTIANITY 33/1 EDIZIONI DEHONIANE BOLOGNA. ASE 33-1.indb 1 19/05/16 11:11

Introduction. It is never a waste of time to study the history of a word. Lucien Febvre, 1930

PROSPECTS FOR A JAMESIAN EXPRESSIVISM 1 JEFF KASSER

Editing Memory: Reply to Melanie White and Other Critics Adam Riggio, Author and Independent Researcher

Course Description. Course objectives. Achieving the Course Objectives:

Reading a Philosophy Text Philosophy 22 Fall, 2019

A RESPONSE TO "AMERICAN YOUTH AND THE INSTITUTIONAL CHURCH"

DAYS, MONTHS, SEASONS AND DATES

Casey Friedman. La Laïcité et la Liberté de Conscience. Although Article 10 of the high-minded Declaration of the Rights of Man and the

SECTS AND CULTS CONTRAVENING HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE RULE OF LAW

A-level Religious Studies

A Response to "Language Philosophy, Writing, and Reading: A Conversation with Donald Davidson"

The Holy See APOSTOLIC PILGRIMAGE TO AFRICA (MAY 2-12, 1980) ADDRESS OF JOHN PAUL II TO THE CHURCH OF GHANA. Cathedral of Accra Thursday, 8 May 1980

Skepticism and Toleration in Early Modern Philosophy. Instructor: Todd Ryan Office: McCook 322 Office Phone:

CONGRÉGATION GÉNÉRALE 36 rome // 2016

Carlin ROMANO, America the Philosophical

MULTICULTURALISM AND FUNDAMENTALISM. Multiculturalism

Two Views on the Sign Gifts : Continuity vs. Discontinuity

The Social Nature in John Stuart Mill s Utilitarianism. Helena Snopek. Vancouver Island University. Faculty Sponsor: Dr.

Wolfet and John Hittinger.2 Rowman and Littlefield: Lanham, MD Pp. ix-183. Paper, $19.95.

EXAM PREP (Semester 2: 2018) Jules Khomo. Linguistic analysis is concerned with the following question:

Pihlström, Sami Johannes.

The spirit of reaction is back and more

Writing Essays at Oxford

Review of Who Rules in Science?, by James Robert Brown

Exploring Concepts of Liberty in Islam

GENERAL CONGREGATION 36 rome // 2016

Laudatio Serge Dauchy,

EXECUTION AND INVENTION: DEATH PENALTY DISCOURSE IN EARLY RABBINIC. Press Pp $ ISBN:

Marx and Western Marxism History 362G (39550), EUS 346 (36415), CTI (33946) Autumn 2012 Meeting Place: Garrison Meeting Time: T 5-8

AP EUROPEAN HISTORY 2013 SCORING GUIDELINES

AP SEMINAR: End- of- Course Exam SAMPLE RESPONSES SECTION I: PART A. The Uncertainty of Science, by Richard Feynman

3 The Problem of 'Whig History" in the History of Science

1) Mot de bienvenue Caryl Green welcomes the members and says a few words about La Fab.

The Holy See APOSTOLIC JOURNEY TO AFRICA HOMILY OF JOHN PAUL II. Accra (Ghana), 8 May 1980

Anonymous The Rising of the Barbarians: A Non-Primitivist Revolt Against Civilization

POT 2002: Introduction to Political Theory

Reflections on the 34 th General Chapter

La routine quotidienne Talking about your daily routine

Introduction. Davies, 1997, p

Atheism: A Christian Response

Quotations. Where annual elections end, there slavery begins. John Adams, Thoughts on Government, Student Handout 15A.1.

These prayers have been inspired by these verses that we suggest as a starting point for your sermons. Exode 3:6-10 Isaïe 62 Ps 23 Luc 4:14-21

Introduction: Narrow Straits, 7

The Paradox of Positivism

JUDAISl\1 AND VIETNAM

Feminist Epistemology Feminism in Analytic Philosophy Week One, MT 2012, Oxford

A Reading of French Protestantism through French Historical Studies

Philosophy in Review XXXI (2011), no. 5

greater consistency than any other the notion that things ought to be justified rather than blindly accepted from habit and custom.

GCE Religious Studies

PPL 399, Philosophical Perspectives on Liberty. Office Phone: Spring 2007 SYLLABUS

A View Of The Vatican: French Language Edition By Carla Cecilia READ ONLINE

PROVOCATION EVERYONE IS A PHILOSOPHER! T.M. Scanlon

Before I was even sure where I stood in my own faith, I was asked to lead a group and was provided with a set of Bible studies entitled Conversations

UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION. Address by Mr Federico Mayor

What is Couleur Café festival?

Philosophical Review.

Études Ricœuriennes / Ricœur Studies, Vol 6, No 2 (2015), pp ISSN (online) DOI /errs

The Craft of Sociology

Political Science 603 Modern Political Thought Winter 2004

Small Group Assignment 8: Science Replaces Scholasticism

History Europe Since 1789 Peter Weisensel Course Overview: Readings:

Robert Kiely Office Hours: Tuesday 1-3, Wednesday 1-3, and by appointment

ECOSOC Special Consultative Status (2010) UNIVERSAL PERIODIC REVIEW THIRD CYCLE

Transcription:

From Revolution to Restoration? Samuel MOYN If there was no such thing as a pensée 68, was there is there -- a pensée anti-68? Eye-opening as his collection of soundings is, Serge Audier s book stands, or falls, on its thesis that he is studying an interlocking restauration intellectuelle that the various oppositions to May 1968 add up to a general tendency. Reviewed : Serge Audier, La pensée anti-68: essai sur les origines d une restauration intellectuelle, La Découverte, 2008, 379 p., 21, 50. When Luc Ferry and Alain Renaut published their profoundly flawed book La pensée 68 in 1985, they were immediately denounced, and rightly so, for homogenizing a series of philosophical enemies who had weak links to each other, and even less connection the May explosion they allegedly represented -- somehow. It is a fact, after all, that the antihumanist archipelago targeted by Ferry and Renaut was one whose texts had mostly accumulated by the time the événements occurred, without discernibly provoking them. Yet more troubling, the authors of the texts of this French theory were not central to May 1968 as it unfolded -- if they were even around to live through it. Michel Foucault had built his structuralism long before, and was criticized on the brink of the events for its apparent failure to authorize radical action. (He was in Tunisia during May itself.) Jacques Derrida did not take any prominent stand. And Louis Althusser, close to communist orthodoxy, even criticized the revolts (Philippe Sollers did too, and for similar reasons, though this doctrinaire position did not save him, or many of Althusser s followers, from a Maoist temptation later). And so on. It was a judicious decision for the

English translation of Ferry and Renaut s book to have the title French Philosophy of the Sixties (unfortunately the change of title could not save the book from its other shortcomings). Reception History or Rorschach Test? If there was no such thing as a pensée 68, was there is there -- a pensée anti-68? Serge Audier, in reversing Ferry and Renaut for his new book s title, is right to want to avoid their homogenizing artifice: Audier relaxes the stringency of the definition of his own category by emphasizing the raucous pluralism of the voices raised against May 1968 in the forty years since the events. It was one thing for the PCF to worry about unconventional revolt at the time, and another for reactionaries to bemoan its supposedly catastrophic impact on French society. As time passed, as the official discourses and ceremonies (Régis Debray) of one anniversary passed and new ones approached, the variety of responses only mushroomed further. Yet Audier is clearly right both that for all their individuality, different responses to May 68 at time crisscrossed, and that prior studies of the afterlives of the events have been radically truncated in their coverage. There is much to be learned from Audier s guided tour through the various territories in which May 1968 has been held in contempt. Audier has chapters on conservative and leftist attacks on the revolts, immediate and delayed, before longer sections enumerating the problems with Ferry and Renaut s confabulation and the larger liberal and republican positions to which those authors were close at various times. Yet with responsibility comes its own risks. Audier is careful enough a scholar that his catalogue of those who have opposed May 1968 at one or another time comes close to an exercise in accumulation, classification and distinction. Avoiding the Scylla of false association means approaching the Charybdis of excessive diffusion: intellectual history as the making of lists. If Audier s text undermines not simply the strong thesis of unity announced in his title, the threat is that it might leave no reason to study such a motley crew of intellectuals and publicists in one place. So what that so many ideologically distinct groups polished their weapons every time May s anniversary returned? What is to be learned by grouping them into an even seriously extended and often bickering -- family? One response might be that the very variety of reactions to May is what matters most: reception history, in other words, as Rorschach test. But Audier rejects this argument. Already

in 1970, as Audier cites, Henri Lefebvre asked: Qui ne s y est reconnu? Qui n a pas retrouvé son apport, ses prévisions, ses conceptions? Chacun et tous, jusqu aux autorités, jusqu aux idéologues de la police, des institutions et de l État. He finished: Tous ont raison. Audier, however, characterizes Lefebvre s nominalistic conclusion everyone sees what they want to see, revealing more about themselves in what they say of May than about the events themselves as offered un peu vite. Eye-opening as his collection of soundings is, Audier s book stands or falls, therefore, on its thesis that he is studying an interlocking restauration intellectuelle that the various oppositions to May 1968 add up to a general tendency. In this way, Audier s proposal is similar to Daniel Lindenberg s allegation some years ago of a wave of new reaction. The New Conservatism Audier s picture is powerful and disquieting, even if one can at times be forgiven for wondering if 1968 is so central to every element of the fearful backlash he presents, not simply in their historical origins, but in their ideological content. One of Audier s most interesting and revealing sections, for instance, is a long discussion of Pierre Manent s revival of a version of liberalism. Emphasizing Manent s little-known affection in his earliest publications for the Catholic right-winger Aurel Kolnai, Audier recalls very usefully Manent s promotion of Kolnai and Leo Strauss in the conservative liberal circles of journals like Contrepoint and Commentaire, and the effect of these allegiances on the exclusionary definition of liberalism that Manent advocated. But in these sections 1968 doesn t appear, except by a supposedly significant absence. Straussians were, as Audier records, hostile towards 1960s activism, but Audier also shows that Manent himself carefully avoided reproducing their arguments on this score. Audier speculates that Manent left this material on the dock, even as he imported the rest of emerging American neo-conservatism, the better to avoid having to reject American liberalism at the same time as he claimed to be liberalism s champion. It remains true all the same that 1968 is not a major reference point in Manent s œuvre and so Audier s coverage of him and other figures reads at time like a general portrait of conservative renaissance in France that sometimes vilified May 1968 as a special object of scorn but sometimes did not. For this reason, Audier s studies of the liberal and republican revivals frequently stray beyond the official justification for his book s existence.

The bête noire of Audier s book, damned not simply for his own liberal and republican rejection of 1968 but also for his promotion at Le Débat of that of several others in the book, is Marcel Gauchet. As in his section on Manent, Audier asks his reader to trawl through sources that antedated 1968, with if anything a weaker connection to the events and their legacy than Ferry and Renaut s master thinkers had. Yet Audier can certainly now congratulate himself for finding in Gauchet s prior writings the signs of his remarkably strident and uncompromising new critique of May s legacy, published in Le Débat as Bilan d une génération (March-April 2008). Yet Audier s presentation of Gauchet as a longstanding and unambiguous enemy of May, even if now ratified by its subject s opinions, also colludes in some very serious distortion of the past. Gauchet s path from his anarcho-libertarianism of 1968 to his later liberalism was not simply one of conversion against his origins. Put differently, if Gauchet has now flatly dismissed the positive resources of 1968 and of 1968 thought to French culture and society, then he is committing a colossal error of self-reference. Figures like Foucault and (especially) Jacques Lacan were some of the major sources for Gauchet s work over the years certainly far more so than the René Guénon to whom Audier s book implausibly links him! And whatever one concludes about what Gauchet did with these sources, there is no denying the impressive creativity of his transformation of them. Gauchet s sense of the intellectual servility of his generation to master thinkers, in other words, is disproven by his own case. What s more, Gauchet himself has -- in one of his most valuable earlier writings, not cited here -- argued that in the farrago of responses to the events, the most crucial had to draw, however critically, on May s energies: Il appartiendra aux historiens du futur, Gauchet wrote in 1994, de reconstituer le processus de décrochage et de dispersion qui s est silencieusement déroulé au cours de ces années soixante-dix et où s est forgé, loin du théâtre public, le vrai destin intellectuel de la génération 68. He then went on to classify this dispersion, awarding most credit to those who knew how to be for May 1968 and its thought and against it: Pour beaucoup, ce sera l abandon pur et simple Pour bon nombre encore, ce sera le retour discret aux voies éprouvées et aux valeurs sûres. Pour d autres, ce sera la plongée en eaux profondes, dans des puits et des chenaux purement personnels, dont on commence seulement, vingt ans après, à voir émerger les produits. Pour quelques-uns, paradoxalement les plus rares, ce sera l approfondissement et la critique interne des prémisses

dont ils étaient partis avec les autres. In 1994, Gauchet presented his recently deceased partner as falling into the last category internal not external critique and clarification rather than rejection -- and self-evidently classified himself there too. Historically, his own new sense of the absolute uselessness of 1968 is far less compelling. Frenzy in France, Silence in the States The point is not really that the nominalistic view that there were many roads to travel away from this Rome is correct, though one can never fail to emphasize the sheer pluralism of response against those who insist on some unitary pattern. It is that once this génération has passed from the scene, the hard work of dispassionately assessing the profound dependence of its contributions to the experience of May will remain to be assessed, wherever its psychodramatic relations to its activating experience have come to rest. Audier s book begins by alluding to Nicolas Sarkozy s campaign denunciation of 1968 as the rationale for his genealogy of opposition to the event, and readers will find in his book the various sources of this facile dismissal of the event -- and much more. The most sobering implication of this study, whether or not its object ever comes fully into focus, is that the progressive left in France has failed to control the legacy of the May events, reconciling their democratic invention with programmatic vision and institutional enterprise. While it has become ritualistic in France to complain about the ritualistic frenzy of commemoration this month, it could be worse. In the United States, no major intellectual venue not the New York Times, not the New York Review of Books, not even The Nation has had much to say about 1968, in France or in general. There was no such thing as a pensée 68 -- and that is the problem. Published in laviedesidees.fr, 6 th June 2008 laviedesidees.fr