Miguel Abensour

Miguel Abensour (French: [abɑ̃suʁ]; 13 February 1939 – 22 April 2017) was a French philosopher specializing in political philosophy. He was emeritus professor of political philosophy at the Paris Diderot University (Jussieu) and a former president of the Collège international de philosophie.

Miguel Abensour
Born13 February 1939
Died22 April 2017
EraContemporary philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolContinental philosophy
Libertarian socialism[1]
Main interests
Political philosophy

Research and works

Abensour has written for the revues Textures, Libre, and Tumultes. Director of the collection Critique de la politique (published by Payot & Rivages) since 1974, he was notable in contributing to the reception of the Frankfurt School in France.[2] In his works and numerous articles, he has sought to reconcile democracy, understood as "democracy against the state", with the idea of utopia, conceived from Emmanuel Levinas's criticism of Martin Buber's idea of interpersonal relations: the I and Thou relationship opposed to the I and It.[2]

He has also published numerous articles on Emmanuel Levinas, Claude Lefort, Saint-Just, utopian socialism (Pierre Leroux, William Morris), Blanqui, and members of the Frankfurt School.[3]

An anthology and critique of his works was published in 2006 by Sens & Tonka, Critique de la politique. Autour de Miguel Abensour, edited by Anne Kupiec and Étienne Tassin.[4]

Works

  • Instructions pour une prise d'armes. L'éternité par les astres. Hypothèse astronomique et autres textes d'Auguste Blanqui établis et présentés par Miguel Abensour et Valentin Pelosse, Paris, Tête de Feuilles, 1973; re-edited by Sens & Tonka in 2000.
  • De la compacité : architecture et régimes totalitaires, Paris, Sens & Tonka, 1997.
  • L'Utopie de Thomas More à Walter Benjamin, Paris, Sens & Tonka, 2000. [English translation: Utopia from Thomas More to Walter Benjamin, Minneapolis, Univocal Publishing, 2017].
  • Le Procès des maîtres rêveurs, Arles, Sulliver, 2000.
  • La Démocratie contre l'État : Marx et le moment machiavélien, Paris, Le Félin, 2004. [English translation: Democracy against the State: Marx and the Machiavellian Moment, Cambridge, Polity, 2011].
  • Rire des lois, du magistrat et des dieux : l'impulsion Saint-just, Lyon, Horlieu, 2005.
  • Hannah Arendt contre la philosophie politique ?, Paris, Sens & Tonka, 2006.
  • Maximilien Rubel, pour redécouvrir Marx, in collaboration with Louis Janover, Paris, Sens & Tonka, 2008.
  • Pour une philosophie politique critique, Paris, Sens & Tonka, 2009.
  • L'Homme est un animal utopique / Utopiques II, Arles, Les Editions de La Nuit, 2010.
  • Le Procès des maîtres rêveurs (nouvelle édition augmentée) / Utopiques I, Arles, Les Editions de La Nuit, 2011.

References

  1. James D. Ingram (2006), "The Politics of Claude Lefort's Political: Between Liberalism and Radical Democracy", Thesis Eleven 87(1), 2006, pp. 33–50, esp. p. 39.
  2. Robert Maggiori, « L’utopie de Miguel Abensour » Archived 2011-06-28 at the Wayback Machine, Libération, 11 juin 2009.
  3. Voir ouvrages liés à la notice d'autorité du philosophe sur le site de la Bibliothèque nationale de France.
  4. Critique de la politique. Autour de Miguel Abensour Archived 2011-07-28 at the Wayback Machine Journée de la philosophie à l'Unesco, 2004.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.