ABSTRACT

Why is postmodernist discourse so biased against the Enlightenment? Indeed, postmodern theory challenges the validity of the rational basis of modern historical scholarship and the Enlightenment itself. Rather than avoiding this conflict, the contributors to this vibrant collection return to the philosophical roots of the Enlightenment, and do not hesitate to look at them through a postmodernist lens, engaging issues like anti-Semitism, Utopianism, colonial legal codes, and ideas of authorship. Dismissing the notion that the two camps are ideologically opposed and thus incompatible, these essays demonstrate an exciting new scholarship that confidently mixes the empiricism of Enlightenment thought with a strong postmodernist skepticism, painting a subtler and richer historical canvas.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Postmodernism and the French Enlightenment

chapter |24 pages

Montesquieu in the Caribbean

The Colonial Enlightenment between Code Noir and Code Civil

chapter |14 pages

Man in the Mirror

Language, the Enlightenment, and the Postmodern

chapter |22 pages

An Eighteenth-Century Time Machine

The Encyclopedia of Denis Diderot

chapter |26 pages

Virtuous Economies

Modernity and Noble Expenditure from Montesquieu to Caillois

chapter |24 pages

Rationalizing the Enlightenment

Postmodernism and Theories of Anti-Semitism 1

chapter |14 pages

Reproducing Utopia

Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont's The New Clarissa

chapter |22 pages

Foucault, Nietzsche, Enlightenment

Some Historical Considerations