•  44
    La modalité critique chez Marx
    Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 189 (2). 1999.
    Marx, avec Kant et Bayle, est l'un des rares auteurs dont la pensée est associée dans son ensemble à la notion de critique. Il fit subir des modifications décisives à la fonction critique et il est sans doute l'un de ceux qui eurent le plus d'influence sur les consonances actuelles du thème de la critique en philosophie et en politique. La notion de critique est centrale chez le jeune Marx comme chez le Marx de la maturité, mais elle est prise en de nombreuses acceptions, tributaires de différen…Read more
  •  43
  •  20
    The political philosophy of social suffering
    In Boudewijn de Bruin & Christopher F. Zurn (eds.), New waves in political philosophy, Palgrave-macmillan. 2009.
  •  156
    In contemporary political philosophy, the disqualification of the problematic of alienation has to a large extent rested on the conviction that the norms of democracy, justice, and the good life provide a sufficient framework within which to outline a social critique that is politically pertinent. The paradox is that, at the very moment when such a conviction was becoming widespread, its validity was being refuted by the historical reality. It would appear that the casting-off of the Fordist sys…Read more
  •  76
    Marx et les critiques de l'économie politique
    Actuel Marx 27 (1): 153. 2000.
  •  103
    L'idéologie comme description
    Rue Descartes 49 (3): 84-91. 2005.
  •  155
    From fordism to post-fordism: Beyond or back to alienation?
    Critical Horizons 8 (2): 205-220. 2007.
    The evidence today is practically uncontested: about thirty years ago we left Fordism behind and entered a new phase of capitalism. That the structures of the post-Fordist social order call for new modes of social critique is also a prevalent idea. The category of alienation continues, however, to be discredited. Nevertheless it is not clear that the categories of democracy (as apparatuses of non-domination), justice and the good life are capable of bringing about the political effects that may …Read more
  •  129
    Three Marxian Approaches to Recognition
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 16 (4): 699-711. 2013.
    If it seems fully legitimate to introduce Marx in the contemporary discussion about recognition, it is more disputable to attribute to Marx an unified conception of recognition. There is no doubt that Marx hasn’t provided any systematic account of recognition, but he has tackled the issue of recognition from various points of view. Could these various points of view be unified in a general conception of recognition? This article claims that this is not the case since three accounts of recognitio…Read more
  •  175
    Current debates on neo-liberal governmentality and the medicalization-psychologization of the social constantly refer to Foucault’s theory of biopolitics. I critically examine Foucault’s notions of biopolitics and liberalism as conveyed in his articles on the emergence of social medicine in the 19th century. My thesis is that the movement of sanitary reform is irreducible to the mere development of liberal governmentality and that the idea of social medicine was associated in the period with a c…Read more
  •  35
    Marxism, Politics, and Social Experience
    In Rahel Jaeggi & Daniel Loick (eds.), Karl Marx - Perspektiven der Gesellschaftskritik, De Gruyter. pp. 285-296. 2013.
  •  110
    On Marx and Marxisms
    with Jacques Bidet, Bruno Tinel, Gérard Duménil, and Michael Löwy
    Actuel Marx 48 (2): 129-137. 2010.
    On Marx et Marxisms. In response to the questions addressed by Jacques Bidet and Bruno Tinel, Gérard Duménil, Michael Löwy and Emmanuel Renault here outline the approach they adopted in their two recently published books on Marx, and on Marxisms. The questions raised here mainly hinge on the articulation between the political, the philosophical and the economic dimension of Marx’s writings, and the way these can be mobilised within contemporary debates.