Global Information Lookup Global Information

Miguel Abensour information


Miguel Abensour
Miguel Abensour
BornFebruary 13, 1939
10th arrondissement of Paris
DiedApril 22, 2017
14th arrondissement of Paris
Notable workDemocracy Against the State (1997)
SchoolContinental philosophy, Libertarian socialism
InstitutionsParis VII
Main interests
Political philosophy, history of ideas, democracy, emancipation, revolution, totalitarianism, utopia
Notable ideas
New utopian spirit
Insurgent democracy
Dialectic of emancipation
Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox philosopher with unknown parameter "influences"
Preview warning: Page using Template:Infobox philosopher with unknown parameter "influenced"

Miguel Abensour (French: [abɑ̃suʁ], February 13, 1939 – April 22, 2017) was a French philosopher specializing in political philosophy.

Beginning his academic career as a professor of political science at Dijon, then at the University of Reims, before teaching political philosophy at the Paris Diderot University (Jussieu), where he became emeritus professor. Founder and director of the editorial collection "Critique de la politique" at Payot and president of the Collège international de philosophie from 1985 to 1987, he is generally viewed as a left-libertarian thinker and as a theoretician of radical democracy.[1][2][3]

With thinkers such as Claude Lefort, Pierre Clastres, Cornelius Castoriadis, and Marcel Gauchet, Abensour greatly contributed to the renewal of French political philosophy in the post-war period.[4] Aware of the many controversies surrounding the legacy, history, and historiography of the French Revolution in France, he examined the contradictions of the French revolutionaries and commented their texts (especially Saint-Just). In the wake of the rediscovery of Karl Marx, notably his early writings, Abensour aimed to distinguish Marx's own thought from Marxism. After the advent of the Nazi regime and the Shoah, the Italian fascism and against Soviet totalitarianism, Abensour questioned the nature of those totalitarian experiences in which he sees the blossoming of domination and the vanishing of politics. Moreover, while several political leaders in France and worldwide have advocated for liberal democracy, Abensour emphasized the distinction between representative government and democracy.

In the same spirit of critique, Abensour has offered many studies on Theodor W. Adorno, Hannah Arendt, and Emmanuel Levinas. He examined the history of utopia and identified in it a "new utopian spirit." Finally, Abensour has developed a conception of democracy that he refers to as "insurgent democracy." This complex idea, akin to other theories of radical democracy, insists on the dissolution of the State-form and political domination as the authentic democratic moment per excellence.

Whether in his work as an editor, as a thinker, or as a public intellectual, Miguel Abensour always reflected on the emancipation of the oppressed. Acting as the guiding thread of his thought, the question posed by Étienne de La Boétie never left him: "why does the majority of the oppressed not revolt?" Eventually, he reframed this fundamental question with the terms set by Baruch Spinoza: "why do men fight for their servitude as if it were for their own salvation?"

  1. ^ Birnbaum, Jean (April 25, 2017). "Le philosophe Miguel Abensour est mort". Le Monde. p. 14. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  2. ^ Poirier, Nicholas (October 6, 2017). "Miguel Abensour, l'émancipation par l'utopie". La Vie des Idées. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  3. ^ Rouillé-Boireau, Monique (July 23, 2018). "Miguel Abensour, penseur libertaire". Lignes. 56 (Special Issue: Miguel Abensour, La sommation utopique): 103–14. doi:10.3917/lignes.056.0103.
  4. ^ Breaugh, Martin; Holman, Christopher; Magnusson, Rachel; Mazzocchi, Paul; Penner, Devin, eds. (2015). Thinking Radical Democracy: The Return to Politics in Post-War France. Toronto: Toronto University Press. pp. 3–30. ISBN 978-1-4426-2199-2.

and 9 Related for: Miguel Abensour information

Request time (Page generated in 2.5627 seconds.)

Miguel Abensour

Last Update:

Miguel Abensour (French: [abɑ̃suʁ], February 13, 1939 – April 22, 2017) was a French philosopher specializing in political philosophy. Beginning his academic...

Word Count : 6838

Claude Lefort

Last Update:

from 1971 to the end (1975) and there he brought in Castoriadis and Miguel Abensour. With them (as well as Pierre Clastres and Marcel Gauchet) he created...

Word Count : 2930

List of philosophers born in the 20th century

Last Update:

(1915–2006) Henry D. Abelove (born 1945) Raziel Abelson (1921–2017) Miguel Abensour (1939–2017) Arash Abizadeh William Emmanuel Abraham (born 1934) David...

Word Count : 9856

Pierre Leroux

Last Update:

Erforschung des vormarxistischen Sozialismus (Frankfurt am Main, 1988) Miguel Abensour, Le Procès des maîtres rêveurs (Paris, 2000) Bruno Viard, Pierre Leroux...

Word Count : 1201

Pierre Clastres

Last Update:

journal Libre alongside the former members of Socialisme ou Barbarie Miguel Abensour, Cornelius Castoriadis, Marcel Gauchet, Claude Lefort, and Maurice...

Word Count : 5274

Deaths in April 2017

Last Update:

academic. Jetsun Lobsang Tenzin, 80, Tibetan Lama, 103rd Ganden Tripa. Miguel Abensour, 78, French philosopher. Hector Acebes, 96, American photographer....

Word Count : 10903

Marcel Gauchet

Last Update:

Together with Lefort, Castoriadis and Clastres, and in association with Miguel Abensour and Maurice Lucciani, Gauchet then launched the journal Libre in March...

Word Count : 8039

Discourse on Voluntary Servitude

Last Update:

Boétie was at the university. See Bonnefon, op. cit., pp. xxxvi-xxvii;" Abensour, Miguel (2011). "Is there a proper way to use the voluntary servitude hypothesis...

Word Count : 767

Allegory of the cave

Last Update:

Plato's Cave Allegory and Theaetetus". Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. Abensour, Miguel (2007). "Against the Sovereignty of Philosophy over Politics: Arendt's...

Word Count : 2812

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net