This article suggests that Eribon’s autobiography is most engaging (as literature) and valuable (as social document) in those moments when the author loses his interpretative grip on the meaning of his own experience. Although a concerted attempt is made by Eribon to account for his problematic relationship to his working-class family background, in particular his father, in purely sociological terms, a restive textual indeterminacy at key junctures unwittingly exposes the limitations of this approach. By allowing us to glimpse the limits of its author’s sociological rationalism, the autobiography calls into question Eribon’s strategic rejection of psychoanalytic forms of understanding and a number of his other longstanding theoretical and ...
This article claims that biography is an area of knowledge. The argument is formulated by examining ...
International audienceThis article proposes to apprehend migratory phenomena from the paradigm of ex...
René Laforgue reading Baudelaire and Rousseau. An autobiographical reading? Psychoanalysis of readin...
“After his father’s death, Didier Eribon went back to Reims, his hometown, and rediscovered a social...
With Retour à Reims ["Return to Reims"], which is published in 2009, Didier Eribon used his own biog...
With Retour à Reims [“Return to Reims”], which is published in 2009, Didier Eribon used his own biog...
Reading one’s own biography on the basis of the same criteria used to analyse other subjects can off...
Reading one's own biography on the basis of the same criteria used to analyse other objects of study...
Since the publication of Oneself as Another, many sociologists have referred to the work of Paul Ric...
This article considers Alain Ehrenberg's extensive analysis of individualism in contemporary France....
My reflections are inspired by the thought of Umberto Eco and Michel Foucault on the nature of text ...
This article considers how one might define ‘psychoanalytic autobiography’, using statements from th...
Note:This thesis grew out of a desire, on the one hand, to comprehend the nature of the relationship...
La société comme verdict. Classes, identités, trajectoires. Didier Eribon. Paris, Champs Essais, Fla...
This article examines recent attempts by IR scholars to flesh out a reflexive approach inspired by t...
This article claims that biography is an area of knowledge. The argument is formulated by examining ...
International audienceThis article proposes to apprehend migratory phenomena from the paradigm of ex...
René Laforgue reading Baudelaire and Rousseau. An autobiographical reading? Psychoanalysis of readin...
“After his father’s death, Didier Eribon went back to Reims, his hometown, and rediscovered a social...
With Retour à Reims ["Return to Reims"], which is published in 2009, Didier Eribon used his own biog...
With Retour à Reims [“Return to Reims”], which is published in 2009, Didier Eribon used his own biog...
Reading one’s own biography on the basis of the same criteria used to analyse other subjects can off...
Reading one's own biography on the basis of the same criteria used to analyse other objects of study...
Since the publication of Oneself as Another, many sociologists have referred to the work of Paul Ric...
This article considers Alain Ehrenberg's extensive analysis of individualism in contemporary France....
My reflections are inspired by the thought of Umberto Eco and Michel Foucault on the nature of text ...
This article considers how one might define ‘psychoanalytic autobiography’, using statements from th...
Note:This thesis grew out of a desire, on the one hand, to comprehend the nature of the relationship...
La société comme verdict. Classes, identités, trajectoires. Didier Eribon. Paris, Champs Essais, Fla...
This article examines recent attempts by IR scholars to flesh out a reflexive approach inspired by t...
This article claims that biography is an area of knowledge. The argument is formulated by examining ...
International audienceThis article proposes to apprehend migratory phenomena from the paradigm of ex...
René Laforgue reading Baudelaire and Rousseau. An autobiographical reading? Psychoanalysis of readin...