INTELLECTUAL ANARCHY AND IMAGINARY OTHERNESS:
Identifieur interne : 000279 ( Istex/Curation ); précédent : 000278; suivant : 000280INTELLECTUAL ANARCHY AND IMAGINARY OTHERNESS:
Auteurs : Christopher E. Forth [Australie]Source :
- Sociological Quarterly [ 0038-0253 ] ; 1996-09.
English descriptors
- Teeft :
- Acadcmie frangaise, Academic overproduction, Actual women, Aesthetic crowds, Anarchism, Anarchist, Anarchy, Annual conference, Artistic activity, Artistic purity, Autonomous space, Basil blackwell, Bleue, Body intellect, Bourdieu, Bourgeois, Brunetibre, California press, Certain number, Chicago press, Collective egoism, Collectivism, Comte, Cornell university press, Cultural hierarchies, Cultural production, Degeneration, Degeneration theory, Disorder, Doumic, Dreyfus, Dreyfus affair, Dreyfusard, Dreyfusard intellectuals, Dreyfusards, Durkheim, Effeminacy, Effeminate, Elite status, Elitist anxieties, Female body, Female education, Feminine qualities, Femininity, Feminism, Feminist, Feminist theory, Foreign writers, French history, French intellectuals, Gender, Gendered, General sense, Harvard university press, High number, Imaginary femininity, Imaginary otherness, Individual minds, Institutional consecration, Intellectual, Intellectual activity, Intellectual anarchism, Intellectual anarchy, Intellectual aristocracy, Intellectual capital, Intellectual disorder, Intellectual domain, Intellectual elite, Intellectual enterprise, Intellectual eunuchs, Intellectual field, Intellectual life, Intellectual order, Intellectual proletarianism, Intellectual proletarians, Intellectual proletariat, Intellectual unity, Intellectuels, Internal logic, Jean bourdeau, John cerullo, July, Liberal republicans, Literary establishment, Literary field, Literary world, Many intellectuals, Many writers, Mass culture, Maurice barrks, Monument henry, National culture, National icon, National pathology, Nebraska press, Nervous excitability, Nietzsche, Nineteenth century, Nouvelle sorbonne, Other hand, Otherness, Oxford university press, Pathological otherness, Political anarchy, Political crisis, Princeton university press, Prochain si2cle, Proletarian, Public service, Relative autonomy, Republican professors, Revolutionary syndicalists, Revue, Revue bleue, Rival groups, Same principles, Sciences sociales, Social body, Social disorder, Social field, Social order, Social origin, Social world, Sociologist georges palante, Specific logic, Studies conference, Subversive individuals, Such pronouncements, Surmenage intellectuel, Tarde, Third republic, True anarchists, Unestablished writers, Western society, Yale university press, York oxford university press, Young people, Young writers, Zola.
Abstract
This article uses the concept of “intellectual anarchy’ to access the matrix of tensions and representations comprising French intellectual discourse at the turn of the century. It shows that, by accusing one another of fomenting intellectual anarchy, scholars, critics, and poets betrayed masculinist and elitist anxieties about gender and class which, while traditionally depicted as external to such “disinterested’ pursuits, emerge as important organizing structures of the intellectual enterprise itself. While few proletarians and women actually participated in French intellectual life, specters of intellectual proletarianism and effeminacy allowed elites at once to articulate external anxieties regarding collectivism and feminism while using the same principles to distinguish themselves internally from rival groups. That is, as a relatively autonomous space within society, the intellectual field reproduced, according to its own internal logic, the structures of domination that marked the social field.
Url:
DOI: 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1996.tb01757.x
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ISTEX:2928E23AC145EC9914963CE53B9CA891E608B216Le document en format XML
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<term>Anarchism</term>
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<term>Comte</term>
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<term>Female education</term>
<term>Feminine qualities</term>
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<term>Feminism</term>
<term>Feminist</term>
<term>Feminist theory</term>
<term>Foreign writers</term>
<term>French history</term>
<term>French intellectuals</term>
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<term>General sense</term>
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">This article uses the concept of “intellectual anarchy’ to access the matrix of tensions and representations comprising French intellectual discourse at the turn of the century. It shows that, by accusing one another of fomenting intellectual anarchy, scholars, critics, and poets betrayed masculinist and elitist anxieties about gender and class which, while traditionally depicted as external to such “disinterested’ pursuits, emerge as important organizing structures of the intellectual enterprise itself. While few proletarians and women actually participated in French intellectual life, specters of intellectual proletarianism and effeminacy allowed elites at once to articulate external anxieties regarding collectivism and feminism while using the same principles to distinguish themselves internally from rival groups. That is, as a relatively autonomous space within society, the intellectual field reproduced, according to its own internal logic, the structures of domination that marked the social field.</div>
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