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	<title>Books &amp; ideas</title>
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	<description>Books &amp; Ideas is the English-language mirror website of La Vie des Id&#233;es, a free online journal which has gained a large readership and established itself in France as a major place for intellectual debate since 2007.</description>
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		<title>Confess and Obey</title>
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		<dc:date>2014-09-04T07:00:00Z</dc:date>
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		<dc:language>en</dc:language>
		<dc:creator>Fr&#233;d&#233;ric Gros</dc:creator>


		<dc:subject>power</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>truth</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>subjectivity</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>language</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>Christianity</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>Institut fran&#231;ais</dc:subject>

		<description>&lt;p&gt;In the lecture delivered between January and March 1980, Michel Foucault, after completing his studies of &#8220;power-knowledge,&#8221; attached new importance to the subject&#8212;specifically, to a form of subjectivity experienced in the injunction to speak of oneself, to better submit onself to others.&lt;/p&gt;
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		<title>Citizen Balibar</title>
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		<dc:date>2012-11-26T08:00:00Z</dc:date>
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		<dc:creator>Nicolas Duvoux &amp; Pascal S&#233;v&#233;rac</dc:creator>


		<dc:subject>Philosophy</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>subjectivity</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>Text Interviews</dc:subject>

		<description>&lt;p&gt;Who comes after the subject? According to &#201;tienne Balibar, it is the citizen&#8212;grasped not in her isolated sovereignty, but as a member of an emerging community. Yet the equality of rights that modernity proclaims does not preclude the possibility of segregation and exclusion. In this long interview, the philosopher Balibar explores this paradox, which fuels his method of analysis.&lt;/p&gt;
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		<title>Thinking About the Self</title>
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		<dc:date>2009-02-06T12:12:39Z</dc:date>
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		<dc:language>en</dc:language>
		<dc:creator>Nicolas Delalande</dc:creator>


		<dc:subject>Philosophy</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>individualism</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>la suite gauche</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>subjectivity</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>postmodernism</dc:subject>

		<description>&lt;p&gt;It has been said since the 1970s that the &#8220;death of the subject&#8221; is an irrevocable given of any modern conception of the self. Jerrold Seigel shows how to go beyond this simplistic approach: with a multi-dimensional vision of the self, taking into account its bodily, social and reflexive nature, he demonstrates that the self has been at the core of Western philosophy and historical experience from Locke to Derrida.&lt;/p&gt;
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