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OverviewIs the thought of Gilles Deleuze secretly linked to Pierre-Joseph Proudhon's declaration: 'I am an anarchist'? Has anarchism, for more than a century and a half, been secretly Deleuzian? In the guise of a playfully unorthodox lexicon, sociologist Daniel Colson presents an exploration of hidden affinities between the great philosophical heresies and 'a thought too scandalous to take its place in the official edifice of philosophy,' with profound implications for the way we understand social movements. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Daniel Colson , Jesse CohnPublisher: Autonomedia Imprint: Minor Compositions ISBN: 9781570273414ISBN 10: 1570273413 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 18 April 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsColson's Lexicon is an inspiring resource for conceptualizing anarchism: it offers new, exciting paths for exploring anarchism with French thought and French thought with anarchism. - Iwona Janicka, author of Theorizing Contemporary Anarchism In a creative and yet precise way, Daniel Colson brings together two lines of thought - philosophy from Spinoza to Leibniz - and anarchism from Proudhon to the present day. At their intersection he discovers an affirmative and expressive anarchism that rejects all forms of resentment and negativity. This is anarchism as joy and empowerment rather than sadness and accusation. - Todd May, author of The Political Philosophy of Poststructuralist Anarchism Offers a line of thinking that connects disparate thinkers ranging from Proudhon to Simondon to Nietzsche to Deleuze... What emerges is a radical challenge to the insistence on dialectic resolution, to occult left teleologies, and to the certainty that past anarchists have nothing to say to contemporary anarchists. - James Martel, author of The Misinterpellated Subject ""Colson's Lexicon is an inspiring resource for conceptualizing anarchism: it offers new, exciting paths for exploring anarchism with French thought and French thought with anarchism."" - Iwona Janicka, author of Theorizing Contemporary Anarchism ""In a creative and yet precise way, Daniel Colson brings together two lines of thought - philosophy from Spinoza to Leibniz - and anarchism from Proudhon to the present day. At their intersection he discovers an affirmative and expressive anarchism that rejects all forms of resentment and negativity. This is anarchism as joy and empowerment rather than sadness and accusation."" - Todd May, author of The Political Philosophy of Poststructuralist Anarchism ""Offers a line of thinking that connects disparate thinkers ranging from Proudhon to Simondon to Nietzsche to Deleuze... What emerges is a radical challenge to the insistence on dialectic resolution, to occult left teleologies, and to the certainty that past anarchists have nothing to say to contemporary anarchists."" - James Martel, author of The Misinterpellated Subject """Colson's Lexicon is an inspiring resource for conceptualizing anarchism: it offers new, exciting paths for exploring anarchism with French thought and French thought with anarchism."" - Iwona Janicka, author of Theorizing Contemporary Anarchism ""In a creative and yet precise way, Daniel Colson brings together two lines of thought - philosophy from Spinoza to Leibniz - and anarchism from Proudhon to the present day. At their intersection he discovers an affirmative and expressive anarchism that rejects all forms of resentment and negativity. This is anarchism as joy and empowerment rather than sadness and accusation."" - Todd May, author of The Political Philosophy of Poststructuralist Anarchism ""Offers a line of thinking that connects disparate thinkers ranging from Proudhon to Simondon to Nietzsche to Deleuze... What emerges is a radical challenge to the insistence on dialectic resolution, to occult left teleologies, and to the certainty that past anarchists have nothing to say to contemporary anarchists."" - James Martel, author of The Misinterpellated Subject" Author InformationDaniel Colson is a professor of sociology at the Université de St.-Étienne in Lyon. He is the author of Trois Essais de Philosophie Anarchiste: Islam, Histoire, Monadologie (2004) as well as several studies of French labor history. Jesse Cohn is an associate professor of English at Purdue University Northwest. He is the author of Anarchism and the Crisis of Representation: Hermeneutics, Aesthetics, Politics (2006) and Underground Passages: Anarchist Resistance Culture, 1848-2011 (2014). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |