Sartre Studies International, Volume 20, Number 1, Spring 2014

Posted on Jun 8, 2014 in News, SSI

Sartre et Foucault: Parcours de Réconciliation
pp. 1-16(16)
Author: Caddeo, Francesco

Abstract

After decades of separation between Sartre’s philosophy and Foucault’s philosophy, we are now in a position to offer an analysis free from all dogmatic presuppositions. On the basis of certain themes, such as the study of the mechanisms of power, systems of marginalization, and how subjectivity is constituted, it is now possible to create links which go beyond the sterile polemics which have so often marked French philosophy. Today, Sartre and Foucault can be re-read as two very important tool-keys for giving us a way to understand the developments arising during our time. Their personal polemic of the mid-1960s must be re-read as a mutual misunderstanding. Notwithstanding some of the acerbic remarks the two philosophers said about each other, we will see that in these same pages can be found ways of thinking, especially regarding the conception of subjectivity, which can bring together these two intellectual itineraries.

 

Après quelques décennies de séparation académique entre la philosophie sartrienne et foucaldienne, nous pouvons maintenant déployer une analyse qui se détache de tous les préjugés dogmatiques. À partir de certaines thématiques particulières comme celles de l’étude des mécanismes du pouvoir, des systèmes de marginalisation, de constitution de la subjectivité, il est possible aujourd’hui de construire des liens qui dépassent les stériles polémiques qui ont souvent marqué la philosophie française. Aujourd’hui Sartre et Foucault peuvent être relus, en fait, comme deux boites-à-outils très importantes pour donner une clé de lecture des évènements marquants de l’époque contemporaine. Leur polémique personnelle du milieu des années soixante doit être relue, en effet, comme une incompréhension réciproque : malgré les échanges acerbes entre les deux philosophes, nous verrons dans ces pages que certaines considérations, surtout à propos de la conception de la subjectivité, peuvent rapprocher les deux parcours intellectuels.

Sartre and Cyber-Dissidence: The Group en Fusion and the Putative We-Subject
pp. 17-35(19)
Author: Wilson, John G.

Abstract

Recently, social-media tools have been widely credited with igniting pervasive social upheavals in the Middle East, some of which brought down governments. This article explores the putative structure of such gatherings and considers new developments in what such collectives might be from a Sartrean perspective, in particular as mediated by the arrival of social media. A Sartrean perspective on the still indefinite composition of media collectives is offered under Sartre’s concept of the groupe en fusion, yet still open to discussion under his concept of individual free choice. Throughout, the chimerical presence of the We-subject, as an ontologically suspect entity arises, in particular when reification is attempted by socialmedia users living under illiberal political regimes. The situation of dissident women in the Middle East is often referred to.

The Return of Stolen Praxis: Counter-Finality in Sartre’s Critique of Dialectical Reason
pp. 36-44(9)
Author: Turner, Christopher

Abstract

What is counter-finality? Who, or what, is the agent of counter-finality? In the Critique of Dialectical Reason, Sartre employs a complicated and multivalent notion of counter-finality, the reversal of the finality intended by an agent in different contexts and at different levels of complexity. Sartre’s concept of counter-finality is read here as an attempt to rethink and broaden the traditional Marxist notion of commodity fetishism as a tragic dialectic of human history whose final act has yet to play out. The article analyses and explicates Sartre’s complex concept of counter-finality, focusing on material antipraxis.

Sartre and God: A Spiritual Odyssey? Part 2
pp. 45-56(12)
Author: Gillespie, John H.

Abstract

These two articles examine whether Sartre’s final interviews, recorded in L’Espoir maintenant (Hope Now) indicate a final turn to God and religious belief through an overview of his engagement with the idea of God throughout his career. Part 1, published in Sartre Studies International 19, no. 1, examined Sartre’s early atheism, but noted the pervasive nature of secularised Christian metaphors and concepts in his religion of letters and also the centrality of mankind’s desire to be God in L’Etre et le néant (Being and Nothingness). Sartre’s theoretical writings sought to refute the idea of God, but in doing so, made God paradoxically both absent and present. Part 2 considers Sartre’s anti-theism and its implications for his involvement with the idea of God before examining in detail his final encounter with theism as outlined in L’Espoir maintenant, arguing that it is part of Sartre’s long-term engagement with the divine, but refuting the idea that he became a theist at the end of his life.

Sartre’s Eighteenth Century: A Model for Engagement?
pp. 57-68(12)
Author: Gunter, Wesley

Abstract

Sartre’s thoughts on the eighteenth century are ambiguous and schematic at best but they do contain an interesting analysis of materialism that continues from this period through to the early 1940s. Even though Sartre refers to the eighteenth-century as a paradise soon-to-be lost, it is argued here that his condemnation of atomistic materialism as it was conceived during this period is directly linked to his rejection of the dialectical materialism of the Communist Party and bourgeois ideology. This article examines the relationship between these different modes of thought and seeks to demonstrate how Sartre’s take on the eighteenth century provided a stern warning to the communists about the pitfalls associated with basing a revolution on materialist doctrine.

Sartre, Kafka, and the Universality of the Literary Work
pp. 69-85(17)
Author: Bogaerts, Jo

Abstract

French existentialism is commonly regarded as the main impetus for the universal significance that Kafka gained in postwar France. A leading critic, Marthe Robert, has contended that this entailed an outright rejection of interest in the biographical, linguistic and historical dimension of Kafka’s writing in order to interpret it as a general expression of the human condition. This article will consider this claim in the light of Sartre’s original conceptualization of a dialectic of the universal and the particular in the intercultural mediation of the work of art. The notion of a ‘true universality’ proposed by Sartre as a defence of Kafka during the 1962 Moscow Peace Conference will allow for a reassessment of Robert’s criticism in a paradoxical reversal of terms: it is precisely the inevitable loss of context and the appropriation within one’s own particular situation which allow the literary work to elucidate a foreign historical context and thereby gain a wider significance. Rather than a universal meaning of the work, Sartre’s concept points to literature’s potential to continually release specific meanings in new contexts.