Notice bibliographique
- Notice
Type(s) de contenu et mode(s) de consultation : Texte noté : sans médiation
Titre(s) : Revolutions for the future, May '68 and the Prague spring [Texte imprimé] / edited by Jana Ndiaye Berankova, Michael Hauser, and Nick Nesbitt
Publication : Lyon : Suture press, copyright 2020
Impression : impr. en République tchèque
Description matérielle : 1 vol. (321 p.) : ill. ; 25 cm
Note(s) : Contient cinq textes traduits
Autre(s) auteur(s) : Berankova, Jana Ndiaye. Éditeur scientifique
Hauser, Michael (1972-....). Éditeur scientifique
Nesbitt, Nick (1964-....). Éditeur scientifique
Sujet(s) : Philosophie politique -- Europe -- 1945-1970
France -- 1968 (Journées de mai)
Tchécoslovaquie -- 1968 (Printemps de Prague et intervention)
Indice(s) Dewey :
940.556 (23e éd.) = Histoire - Europe - 1960-1969
Identifiants, prix et caractéristiques : ISBN 978-2-9569056-1-5 (rel.) : 29 EUR
EAN 9782956905615
Identifiant de la notice : ark:/12148/cb46707897m
Notice n° :
FRBNF46707897
Résumé : Edited by Jana Ndiaye Berankova, Michael Hauser, and Nick Nesbitt Contributors: Jacques
Rancière, Étienne Balibar, Vincent Jacques, Jana Ndiaye Berankova, Reza Naderi, Nick
Nesbitt, Michael Hauser, Petr Kužel, Jan Kober, Ivan Landa, Jan Mervart, Katarzyna
Bielinska, Joe Grim Feinberg Graphic design: Lukáš Kijonka and Michal Krul, Kolektiv
Studio Publication: November 2020 25 x 17,5 x 3,5 cm In English 29 EUR 324 pages ISBN:
978-2-9569056-1-5 The book is published as a hard-cover edition bound in terracotta
cloth with a foil-stamp print. It includes black-and-white illustrations made from
torn posters, tracts, and old photographs. 1968 is the proper name of a global event
that continues to resonate, over half a century later, into the present conjuncture,
in which a shaken neoliberal consensus confronts anew the specter of revolutionary
transformation. It is the contention of this volume that the May '68/the Prague Spring
doublet names in turn a particularly potent, reflected site of articulation in this
global sequence, one that deserves particular interrogation in the rich complexity
of its voicings. The essays in this volume interrogate the French and Czechoslovak
articulation of the last two European revolutions and offer criticism of the putative
‘end of ideology' said to have followed 1989. They assemble a generation of French
and Central European philosophers in order to work through the philosophical heritage
of 1968. [source éditeur]