•  21
    Françoise Proust’s essential points of reference are Kant and Walter Benjamin. Alain Badiou ignores the extraordinary and sometimes beautiful dark power of Proust’s work on Benjamin. As is clear, however, from both Daniel Bensaïd’s interview with Proust and the title of Élizabeth Lemirre and Catherine Perret’s memorial volume (Une philosophie de la résistance: Françoise Proust), the concept of Proust that is most likely to become the dominant one is not Badiou’s, but rather the concept of her as…Read more
  •  6
    Explores the concept of historical intermittency in 5 recent French philosophers. Andrew Gibson engages with five recent and contemporary French philosophers, Badiou, Jambet, Lardreau, Francoise Proust and Ranciere, who each produce a post-Hegelian philosophy of history founded on an assertion of the intermittency of historical value. Gibson explores this `anti-schematics of historical reason' and its implication for politics, ethics and aesthetics in a wide range of modern intellectual contexts…Read more
  •  6
    La crítica social frente a la nación y la sociedad internacional
    SASKAB: Revista de Discusiones Filosóficas desde Acá 6 (1). 2004.
  • Our Shadowed Present: Modernism, Postmodernism, and History (review)
    Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 35 (2): 292-297. 2006.
  • Repetition and event: Badiou and Beckett
    Communication and Cognition. Monographies 37 (3-4): 263-278. 2004.
  • Beckett and Badiou
    In Richard J. Lane (ed.), Beckett and Philosophy, Palgrave. pp. 93--107. 2002.
  •  54
    Beckett and Badiou: The Pathos of Intermittency
    Oxford University Press. 2006.
    The leading contemporary French philosopher Alain Badiou has been a lifelong devotee of Beckett's work. This ground-breaking study provides a full introduction to and critique of Badiou's philosophy, politics, ethics and aesthetics, and his interpretation of the Irish writer, as a basis for a major new reading of the Beckett corpus.
  • The Concept Of Intermittency
    In Mads Anders Baggesgaard & Jakob Ladegaard (eds.), Confronting universalities: aesthetics and politics under the sign of globalisation, Aarhus University Press. 2011.