COML2258 - Existentialism, Structuralism, Poststructuralism: French Thought Since 1945

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Existentialism, Structuralism, Poststructuralism: French Thought Since 1945
Term
2023A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML2258401
Course number integer
2258
Meeting times
R 12:00 PM-2:59 PM
Meeting location
BENN 323
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Warren G Breckman
Description
In no other period, with the possible exception of the European Enlightenment, did French thought enjoy greater international influence than in the decades after the Second World War. From Existentialism, through Structuralism, Poststructuralism, and Postmodernism, French thinkers played a crucial role in shaping the intellectual history of the second half of the twentieth century. This seminar surveys the intellectual movements and some of the key figures of this period. While our discussion will touch on many themes, the core of our inquiry will be the status of the human subject. If late nineteenth and early twentieth-century thinkers were preoccupied by the question of the “death of God,” French philosophical discourse in the late twentieth century was famously obsessed by the death of “Man”. Jean-Paul Sartre opened the post-war era by declaring that the death of God heralded an unprecedented age of Man; soon that proclamation came under attack as rival thinkers of the post-war period subjected the idea of the human “subject” -- the “self” or “ego” -- to unprecedented criticism. With the waning of Sartrean Existentialism, the unfolding dynamics of that critique came to drive the most creative and influential figures in French intellectual life.
Course number only
2258
Cross listings
HIST2258401
Use local description
No