•  14
    Ciaramelli's “Barbarism Without Barbarians”
    Common Knowledge 31 (3): 243-249. 2025.
    Curtis introduces his translation of Fabio Ciaramelli's essay “Barbarism Without Barbarians” with philosophical and linguistic reflections, in a practical vein, on the process of transforming social imaginary significations from one language into another when words and meanings from third and fourth languages also intervene.
  •  16
    Barbarism Without Barbarians
    Common Knowledge 31 (3): 250-260. 2025.
    Behind the disappointment, as imagined in a well-known poem by Constantine Cavafy, that the barbarians have failed to arrive, is a civilization closing upon itself and unable to envision an exit from its crisis. This metaphor is for the unfulfilled desire to overcome, at last, the impasse of a form of life whose shared significations are collapsing without success in renewing themselves. Such a form, enslaved as it is to the monotonous and incontestable repetition of its own identity, and in whi…Read more
  •  27
    Philosophy, Politics, Autonomy (edited book)
    Oxford University Press. 1991.
    These remarkable essays include Cornelius Castoriadis's latest contributions to philosophy, political and social theory, classical studies, development theory, cultural criticism, science, and ecology. Examining the "co-birth" in ancient Greece of philosophy and politics, Castoriadis shows how the Greeks' radical questioning of established ideas and institutions gave rise to the "project of autonomy." The "end of philosophy" proclaimed by Postmodernism would mean the end of this project. That en…Read more
  • Two thousand five hundred years ago, in 507–506 B.C.E., the institutions of Athen were rocked by the reforms of Cleisthenes. Although the word did not yet exist, here was the foundation of democracy. First published in French in 1964, Cleisthenes the Athenian has become the classic study of the philosophical, political, and aesthetic background and significance of these reforms. The book has influenced a generation of scholars in anthropology, sociology, urban planning, political science, philos…Read more
  •  3
    Homage to Cornelius Castoriadis
    with P. Vidal-Naquet
    Common Knowledge 7 1-4. 1998.
  •  176
    A class and state analysis of Henry Sidgwick's utilitarianism
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 11 (3): 259-296. 1986.
  •  94
    Philosophical Interrogation and Creation of Democracy: Iran Confronts Modern Destiny
    with Ramin Jahanbegloo
    Thesis Eleven 32 (1): 103-107. 1992.
  •  2
    The increase in cases of political corruption, the loss of politicians' credibility, the development of social and political forms of pathology, and the role of the State have been at the center of political debates. In one way or another, these problems raise the question of the legitimacy of the established powers. The result is that legitimacy, a key notion of political thought in general, has today become a burning issue. Coicaud examines all these issues and proffers insightful answers to q…Read more
  •  107
    Fighting the Wrong Enemy?
    with Andreas Kalyvas
    Political Theory 26 (6): 818-824. 1998.
  •  125
    Introduction
    Thesis Eleven 49 (1). 1997.
  •  35
    On Plato's "Statesman"
    Stanford University Press. 2002.
    This posthumous book represents the first publication of one of the seminars of Cornelius Castoriadis, a renowned and influential figure in twentieth-century thought. A close reading of Plato's _Statesman_, it is an exemplary instance of Castoriadis's pragmatic, pertinent, and discriminating approach to thinking and reading a great work: "I mean really reading it, by respecting it without respecting it, by going into the recesses and details without having decided in advance that everything it c…Read more
  •  248
    Joel Kovel, In Nicaragua (London, Free Association Books, 1988)
    Thesis Eleven 27 (1): 219-233. 1990.