词条 | Judith Revel |
释义 |
| image = | region = Western philosophy | era = Contemporary philosophy | name = Judith Revel | birth_date = {{birth year and age|1966}} | institutions = École Normale Supérieure Paris X | main_interests = | notable_ideas = | influences = Michel Foucault ; Marcel Gauchet ; Arnold Davidson ; Giorgio Agamben ; Roberto Esposito ; Toni Negri }}Judith Revel (born 1966) is a French philosopher and translator.[1] BiographyDaughter of the historian and former president of the EHESS Jacques Revel, former student of the Ecole Normale Supérieure de Fontenay-Saint-Cloud, Judith Revel is a specialist in contemporary French and Italian thoughts. After a first doctorate of philosophy obtained in Italy, she supported in France a doctoral thesis in philosophy under the direction of Marcel Gauchet (EHESS, 2005).[2] She spent many years in Italy, was a lecturer at the Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne and is now Professor of Contemporary Philosophy at the University Paris-Nanterre since 2014.[3] She is a member of the laboratory Sophiapol. She is a member of the Michel Foucault Center, the scientific council of IMEC, the scientific council of the International College of Philosophy. PhilosophyHer research started from the thought of Michel Foucault, to whom she has devoted a dictionnary, several books and many articles, especially around two themes - the relationship between philosophy of language and literature (developed by Foucault in the 1960s), and the transition from biopolitics to subjectivation (developed by Foucault between the late 1970s and the early 1980s). She is linked to the work of the American philosopher Arnold Davidson, with whom she has in common an attempt to update the ethico-political Foucaldian themes.[4] After the 2005 French riots, she gave a book about the socalled "banlieues" (French suburbs) criticizing both the clichés that surrounds its inhabitants and the growth of racism in the French society.[5] She tried to analyse the refusal to give any political value to what was happening in the suburbs by deconstructing racist implicit images of public speeches (the roots of it might be the conviction that the one who does not speak the language of political representation is necessarily aphasic, childish or even animal). Since the beginning of 2010, she has been working more generally on the philosophy of history, and especially the way in which a certain practice of philosophy has problematized both its own historical situation and the possibility of intervening in the present. In this context, she develops a work on the philosophical use of archives, especially through teachings and seminars at the EHESS.[6] More generally, she studied the different representations of history in French thought since the 1950s. It also extends its investigation of some Italian readings of French poststructuralism (Italian opera and post-opera, thoughts of Giorgio Agamben and Roberto Esposito). Finally, she develops a series of theses on the political theorizations before and after 1968 and on the necessary recasting of the political concepts of modernity, in the silage of Italian operaism and more particularly the analyzes of the philosopher Toni Negri, her husband. She works in particular on the notion of "common" as an alternative to the public / private dichotomy, and on a political ontology of the present building bridges between Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Michel Foucault.[7] BibliographyBooks
References1. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.cairn.info/publications-de-Revel-Judith--17085.htm|title=Publications de Judith Revel - Cairn.info|website=www.cairn.info}} 2. ^{{cite journal|url=http://www.theses.fr/2005EHES0053|title=Différence et discontinuité dans la pensée de Michel Foucault : langage, histoire, subjectivité|first=Revel,|last=Judith|date=1 January 2005|publisher=|journal=http://www.theses.fr/}} 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://dep-philo.u-paris10.fr/dpt-ufr-phillia-philosophie/les-enseignants/revel-judith-548268.kjsp|title=REVEL, Judith|first=Judith|last=Revel|publisher=}} 4. ^The Emergence of Sexuality, Harvard University Press, 2004 5. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2008/12/17/bonnes-feuilles-du-livre-de-judith-revel-qui-a-peur-de-la-banlieue-bayard_1131665_3224.html|title=Bonnes feuilles du livre de Judith Revel, "Qui a peur de la banlieue ?" (Bayard)|website=Le Monde.fr}} 6. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.ehess.fr/fr/enseignement/enseignements/2013/enseignant/1213/|title=Enseignements de Judith Revel, maître de conférences à l'Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, en 2013-2014|website=www.ehess.fr}} 7. ^{{cite web|url=https://philolarge.hypotheses.org/1660|title=P. Macherey : compte rendu de J. Revel « Foucault avec Merleau-Ponty »|publisher=}} External links
6 : 1966 births|21st-century philosophers|Continental philosophers|French philosophers|Living people|Date of birth missing (living people) |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。