ABSTRACT

Jean-Francois Lyotard introduced the term "postmodern" into current discussions within philosophy, politics, society and social theory. His "The postmodern condition" is seminal within the current debates over the relationship of theory and epistemology to history and political practice. For Lyotard, the postmodern condition is one in which the "meta- narratives of legitimation" the enlightenment, Hegelian thought, Marxism have fallen into disuse and can no longer analyze myriad labyrinthine social texts that have been forged from their ruins. Meta- narratives assume the role of privileged discourses not inflected by historical contingencies, and each situate local social and political practices within a broader totalizing and legitimizing framework. Lyotard claims that various local practices can no longer be legitimized by these meta-discourses; legitimation itself descends to the level of praxis as practitioners assume the responsibility for legitimizing their own practices.; "Political writings" is a collection of Lyotard's writings mostly published between 1956 and 1969 in "Socialisme ou Barbarie", the influential journal of the non-Communist French left. The political Motivation Implicit In Lyotard's Arguments In "The Postmodern Condition" become quite explicit in this collection. The articles outline the relevance of political struggles to contemporary debates about social and political theory; the limitations of Marxist models applied to concrete situations; and the development of the analytical categories that Lyotard himself currently uses in his critical practices.; In a rigorous examination of the strategies and passions of various groups, Lyotard demonstrates that the emancipatory models at work in specific local struggles are different from the universalist ones proposed by the Enlightenment, occurring as they do in First World and Third World Contexts In Which Specificity And Difference Are Negotiated And Determined.

chapter |2 pages

Par t I Intellectuals

chapter 1|5 pages

Tomb of the Intellectual

(1983)

chapter 2|3 pages

The Differend

(1982)

chapter 3|3 pages

For a Cultural Nonpolicy

(1981)

chapter 4|5 pages

New Technologies

(1982)

chapter 5|4 pages

Wittgenstein “After”

(1983)

chapter 6|2 pages

Intellectual Fashions

(1983)

chapter 7|6 pages

A Svelte Appendix to the Postmodern Question

(1982)

part |2 pages

Part II Students

chapter 8|8 pages

Dead Letter

(1962)

chapter 9|5 pages

Preamble to a Charter

(1968)

chapter 10|14 pages

Nanterre, Here, Now

(1970)

chapter 11|6 pages

March 23

(Unpublished introduction to an unfinished book on the movement of March

chapter |2 pages

A Book of Antihistory

chapter 12|2 pages

Concerning the Vincennes Psychoanalysis Department

(1975) (with Gilles Deleuze)

chapter 13|7 pages

Endurance and the Profession

(1978)

chapter 14|6 pages

Ersiegerungen

(1989)

part |2 pages

Part III Big Brothers

chapter 15|5 pages

Born in 1925

(1948)

chapter 17|12 pages

Oikos

(1988)

chapter 18|4 pages

The General Line

(for Gilles Deleuze) (1990)

chapter 19|13 pages

The Wall, the Gulf, and the Sun: A Fable

(1990)

part |2 pages

Part IV More “jews”

chapter 20|8 pages

German Guilt

(1948)

chapter 22|11 pages

The Grip (Mainmise)

(1990)

chapter 23|4 pages

Europe, the Jews, and the Book

(1990)

part |2 pages

Part V Algerians

chapter 24|6 pages

The Name of Algeria

(June 1989)

chapter 25|8 pages

The Situation in North Africa

(1956)

chapter 26|8 pages

The North African Bourgeoisie

(1957)

chapter 27|10 pages

A New Phase in the Algerian Question

(1957)

chapter 28|17 pages

Algerian Contradictions Exposed

(1958)

chapter 30|31 pages

The Social Content of the Algerian Struggle

(1959)

chapter 31|16 pages

The State and Politics in the France of 1960

(1960)

chapter |9 pages

The Transformation of Everyday Life

chapter 32|9 pages

Gaullism and Algeria

(1961)

chapter 33|7 pages

Algeria: Seven Years After

(1962)

chapter 34|25 pages

Algeria Evacuated

(1963)

chapter |9 pages

A Society Absent from Itself