From Bakunin to Lacan

Anti-Authoritarianism and the Dislocation of Power

By (author) Saul Newman

Publication date:

11 April 2001

Length of book:

208 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

235x152mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9780739102404

In its comparison of anarchist and poststructuralist thought, From Bakunin to Lacan contends that the most pressing political problem we face today is the proliferation and intensification of power. Saul Newman targets the tendency of radical political theories and movements to reaffirm power and authority, in different guises, in their very attempt to overcome it. In his examination of thinkers such as Bakunin, Lacan, Stirner, and Foucault Newman explores important epistemological, ontological, and political questions: Is the essential human subject the point of departure from which power and authority can be opposed? Or, is the humanist subject itself a site of domination that must be unmasked? As it deftly charts this debate's paths of emergence in political thought, the book illustrates how the question of essential identities defines and re-defines the limits and possibilities of radical politics today.
Newman seems to me to be right on target in seeing anarchism rather than Marxism as the proper jumping-off point for progressive political theory. I recommend the book highly to scholars of progressive thought.