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Edited by François Matheron
Translated and introduced by G.M. Goshgarian
In the late 1970s and 1980s, Louis Althusser endured a period of intense mental instability during which he murdered his wife and was committed to a psychiatric hospital. Spanning this deeply troubling period, this fourth and final volume of political and philosophical writings reveals Althusser wrestling in a creative and unorthodox fashion with a whole series of theoretical problems to produce some of his very finest work. In his profound exploration of questions of determinism and contingency, Althusser developed a “philosophy of the encounter,” which he links to a hidden and subterranean tradition in the history of Western thought.
“Althusser traversed so many livesso many personal, historical, philosophical and political adventures; marked, inflected, influenced so many discourses, actions and existences by the radiant and provocative force of his thoughtthat the most diverse and contradictory accounts could never exhaust their source.” Jacques Derrida
Louis Althusser taught political philosophy for many years at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris, and was a leading intellectual in the French Communist Party. Many major figures studied with him, including Derrida and Foucault, and his work marked a new beginning for post-war political philosophy.
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Publication
June 2006
300 pages
Cloth
1 84467 069 4f
£50 / US$90 / CAN$125
Paper
1 84467 553 X £16.99 / US$27 / CAN$35


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