Om Sentimental Empiricism
¿This stunning book reveals the tradition of `sentimental empiricism¿ in postwar French theory, which makes reading practices and perceptual experiences central to politics. Davide Panagia expertly examines work by Beauvoir, Deleuze, Foucault, and others to show how they challenge mimetic processes of state-sanctioned knowledge with dynamic analyses of difference, domination, and colonial power. Sentimental Empiricism offers nothing less than a new history and interpretation of French political thought.¿¿Elisabeth R. Anker, author of Ugly Freedoms
Sentimental Empiricism reconsiders the legacy of eighteenth and nineteenth century radical empiricism and moral sentimentalism for the intellectual formation of the generation of postwar French thinkers whose work came to dominate Anglophone conversations across the humanities under the guise of ¿French theory.¿ Panagiäs book first shows what was missed in the reception this literature in the Anglophone academy by attending to how France¿s pedagogical milieu plays out church and state relations in the form of educational debates around reading practices, the aesthetics of mimesis, French imperialism, and republican universalism. Panagia then shows how such thinkers as Jean Wahl, Simone de Beauvoir, Gilbert Simondon, Gilles Deleuze, and Michel Foucault develop a sentimental empiricist critical philosophy that distances itself from dialectical critique and challenges the metaphysical premise of inherent relations, especially as it had been articulated in the tradition of Aristotelian scholasticism.
Panagia develops the long disputed political legacy of French theory through an exploration of how these thinkers came to understand an aesthetic of mimesis as a credentialing standard for selection to political participation. Since, in France, the ability to imitate well is a state qualification necessary to access offices of elite power, the political, aesthetic, and philosophical critique of mimesis became one of the defining features of sentimental empiricist thought. By exploring the historical, intellectual, cultural, and philosophical complexities of this political aesthetic, Panagia shows how and why postwar French thinkers turned to a tradition of sentimental empiricism in order to develop a new form of criticism attentive to the dispositional powers of domination.
Davide Panagia is Professor and Chair of Political Science at UCLA.
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