The aim of this article is to investigate Catherine Malabou's reading of Hegel. Subverting the anti-Hegelian trend that flourished in the academic milieu in France, especially through the '68 movement, Malabou seeks to identify how Hegel's philosophy is grounded on a self-differentiation process, whether concerning the idea of subjectivity or the speculative concept. This re-reading would therefore present a rearrangement of Hegelianism, often considered as a totalizing and teleological thought,…
Read moreThe aim of this article is to investigate Catherine Malabou's reading of Hegel. Subverting the anti-Hegelian trend that flourished in the academic milieu in France, especially through the '68 movement, Malabou seeks to identify how Hegel's philosophy is grounded on a self-differentiation process, whether concerning the idea of subjectivity or the speculative concept. This re-reading would therefore present a rearrangement of Hegelianism, often considered as a totalizing and teleological thought, but above all as opposed to the conception of difference.