This book should be read by anyone searching, in a serious and scholarly way, for a new approach to politics in the work of contemporary Continental figures like Jacques Rancière and Michel Foucault. Blaney shows how the notion of practice is central to both thinkers, and how critics have been overly hasty in dismissing Foucault’s late turn to ethics as a new foundation for politics.
Joseph Tanke, Professor of Philosophy, University of Hawaii, USA
Responding to the increasing need for new and peaceful forms of emancipation, Stuart Blaney offers a unique solution in the synergy between two pioneering strands of continental philosophy: Michael Foucault’s ideas on freedom and Jacques Rancière’s ideas on equality.
Building a dialogue between these two thinkers, Blaney presents new perspectives on their work and a clear picture that emancipation comes from everyday practices rather than any particular movement or revolution.
In exploring these combined views of equality and freedom, Blaney draws on some of the central facets of both concepts, including revolution, disagreement, care for the self, free speech and stoicism. To put these ideas into a practical framework of real, lived experience, we are introduced to the figure of Louis-Gabriel Gauny the 19th-century worker-poet and self confessed plebeian philosopher. Gauny is a nexus for Rancière’s and Foucault’s ideas; his life exemplifying a dual mode of existence in-between conformity and political revolution. This lived philosophy of equality and freedom shows the strong synergy between the two concepts, with one reinforcing the other and strengthening their efficacy as forms of emancipatory practice.
1. Introduction
Part One: Rancière and Practices of Equality
2. A Presupposition of Equality
3. Disagreement
4. Redefining Emancipation: Politics as Aesthetics and Aesthetics as Politics
5. Archives, Revenants, and Aesthetics: The Milieu of the Life of Louis-Gabriel Gauny
Part Two: Foucault and Practices of Freedom
6. A Historico-Critical Ontology: Discursive and Non-Discursive Practices
7.An Aesthetics of Existence: The Care of the Self
8. Parrhesia and Cynicism
Part Three: Practices of Equality and Freedom
9. The Traces of a Path: The Emancipatory Life of Gauny
10. Fictions: Reframing the Real
11. Conclusion