“A truly exceptional, insightful, and wholly original conceptual examination of “real existing” resistance in the 21st century under difficult conditions. The essays manage to elaborate a deep understanding of the necessarily fragmented, experimental, and nevertheless inspiring utopian spirit in the absence of totalizing ideologies.” (James C. Scott, Sterling Professor of Political Science, Professor of Anthropology, and co-Director of the Agrarian Studies Program, Yale University, USA)“Broad, innovative and very stimulating, Everyday Resistance is the book we lacked on French progressive social movements, seen from a practical and a theoretical point of view. This book also casts new insights in political philosophy and sociology. Revisiting anarchism, Marxism, feminism, and beyond, this book reformulates old questions by tackling contemporary problems such as gender, ecology, migrations, free software networks, civic disobedience, precariat, or solidarity economy. Thanks to pragmatism, its deep originality is to offer a really new reading grid for social movement studies.” (Luc Boltanski, Director of Studies at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences (EHESS), France)
“A truly exceptional, insightful, and wholly original conceptual examination of “real existing” resistance in the 21st century under difficult conditions. The essays manage to elaborate a deep understanding of the necessarily fragmented, experimental, and nevertheless inspiring utopian spirit in the absence of totalizing ideologies.” (James C. Scott, Sterling Professor of Political Science, Professor of Anthropology, and co-Director of the Agrarian Studies Program, Yale University, USA)
“Broad, innovative and very stimulating, Everyday Resistance is the book we lacked on French progressive social movements, seen from a practical and a theoretical point of view. This book also casts new insights in political philosophy and sociology. Revisiting anarchism, Marxism, feminism, and beyond, this book reformulates old questions by tackling contemporary problems such as gender, ecology, migrations, free software networks, civic disobedience, precariat, or solidarity economy. Thanks to pragmatism, its deep originality is to offer a really new reading grid for social movement studies.” (Luc Boltanski, Director of Studies at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences (EHESS), France)
Les mer