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El. knyga: Other '68s: Lineages and Legacies of May '68

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May ’68 has inspired cultural, social and political movements across the world but has also been used to criticise them. This book interrogates the consideration of the revolts in France as the pinnacle or even paradigm of a particular avatar in a revolutionary lineage that would include the liminal moments of 1789 and 1917. But it also engages in a mapping of the synchronous but not necessarily aligned rebellious events and purported legacies that orbited around that momentous year in the West and its internal periphery, on the other side of the Iron Curtain and in the strategic centre of the Global South constituted by Latin America in the 1960s. The collection combines fresher perspectives with more established scholarship in history, philosophy, critical theory, literary studies, psychoanalysis and visual culture through which the contributors deconstruct the rich and paradoxical conditions, development and vestiges, as creative as well as troubling, of an iconic moment of the twentieth century.



May ’68 has inspired cultural, social and political movements across the world but has been used also to criticise them. This interdisciplinary edited collection interrogates the nature, implications and afterlife of May ’68 across multiple geographic contexts, from Russia to Latin America.

Contents: Įlvaro J. Vidal Bouzon: Introduction: (Other) Takes on a
Strange Spring France et Au-Delą Chris Reynolds: In the Shadow of the
Parisian Doxa: 68s Regional and Transnational Others Mitchell Abidor: May
68, the French Working Class and Revolution Vladimir Zori: Hostages in
Their Own Homes: Transnational Hospitality in the Wake of the Soviet
Occupation of Czechoslovakia Gabriel Albiac: May 68: The Shards of a
Subject Intellectuals In and After 68 Įlvaro J. Vidal Bouzon: (Long)
Goodbyes to the Reality of the Mirror? Novelizing with(out) Subject and
with(out) Ends in Gabriel Albiacs Mayo del
68. Una educacion
sentimental/Fin de fiesta Adam Sharman: The Ends of Revolution: Derrida and
the «Thought of 68» Colin Wright: Lacans May 68: Analysing the
Institution in the Wake of the Discourse of the University Regine
Strätling: Self-Reflexive Maoism? Alberto Moravias Pre-68 Critique of the
Consumer Society Matthias Uecker: Commitment and Distance: Hans Magnus
Enzensberger in 1968 Visual 68s Katherine Shingler and Dominique Beaux:
Un étrange printemps: An Interview with Dominique Beaux Antigoni Memou: The
Repressed Visual Legacies of May 68 Jovana urovi: Hidden Rebellion in
Popular Youth Films in Yugoslavia in the Run-Up to 1968 Stephanie King:
Arriving after the Fact: 68 and the Politics of Belatedness in Exit
Photography Groups Survival Programmes (1982).
Įlvaro J. Vidal Bouzon is Assistant Professor of Hispanic and Lusophone Studies at the University of Nottingham and a fellow of the Galician Academy of the Portuguese Language. He is the author of A Galiza (nćo) é longe daqui? Lendo(-se) em imagens, mirando(-se) em textos, a monograph on the representation of Galician (national) identity.



Adam Sharman is Professor of Latin American Studies and Critical Theory in the Department of Modern Languages and Cultures at the University of Nottingham. He is the author of Deconstructing the Enlightenment in Spanish America and Otherwise Engaged: After Hegel and the Philosophy of History.



Katherine Shingler was Associate Professor of French and Francophone Studies at the University of Nottingham. She is the author of The French Art Novel, 19001930 and was also general editor of the journal Nottingham French Studies.