Thought as Experience in Bataille, Cioran, and Rosset

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A01=Joseph Acquisto
Adorno
Arendt
Author_Joseph Acquisto
Category=DSA
Category=DSM
Category=QDHR
Category=QDHR5
comp lit
continental philosophy
critical theory
dialectics
drama
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eq_biography-true-stories
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
French intellectual theory
history of philosophy
intellectual history
literary theory
philosophy
post-Hegelian
post-war
self-consciousness
subject-object relations
subjectivity
tragedy
World War II

Product details

  • ISBN 9798765111475
  • Weight: 320g
  • Dimensions: 148 x 226mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jan 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Examines how postwar French writers constitute the thinking subject and reshape its relation to the external social world.

Joseph Acquisto analyzes the writings of three thinkers during and shortly after the Second World War who address the question of what it means to think, and what it means to constitute oneself as a thinking subject – at a time that seems to come "after everything"; with the ruins of attacked cities echoing the remains of a philosophical tradition that was confident in its establishment of human beings as rational, of reason leading to progress, and of both the self and the world as knowable.

What Georges Bataille calls "inner experience" and Emil Cioran labels "thinking against oneself" is something akin to a drama; not a mere representation of the self in relation to the world, but a process of remapping the relation of subject to object of thought dialectically. Acquisto argues that both writers adopt an anti-systematic approach to thinking that implicates fragmentary writing as a way of turning answers about subject-object relations into questions. Acquisto contends that this stands in contrast to the approach of Clément Rosset, whose affirmation of the inaccessibility of the real leads to an anti-intellectual, grace-filled affirmation of life as it is given, under the guise of what he calls the "tragic."

Bringing together thinkers that have seldom been discussed in a comparative light, Thought as Experience in Bataille, Cioran, and Rosset examines the affective dimensions of thought as experience and considers the political stakes of postwar thought as "out of order" with the world from which it springs.

Joseph Acquisto is Professor of French at the University of Vermont, USA. He is the author or editor of seven books, including of Reading Baudelaire with Adorno: Subjectivity, Dissonance, Transcendence (Bloomsbury 2023). Proust, Music, and Meaning: Theories and Practices of Listening in the Recherche, and The Fall Out of Redemption: Writing and Thinking Beyond Salvation in Baudelaire, Cioran, Fondane, Agamben, and Nancy (Bloomsbury 2015).

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