The Emergence of Social Space: Rimbaud and the Paris Commune (Radical Thinkers) Buy on Amazon
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The Emergence of Social Space: Rimbaud and the Paris Commune (Radical Thinkers)

Author Kristin Ross
Publisher Verso
11.66 12.95 -10% USD

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Book Details
Author(s) Kristin Ross
Publisher Verso
ISBN / ASIN 1844672069
ISBN-13 9781844672066
Availability Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank #570,789
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
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Description
The 1870s in France – Rimbaud’s moment, and the subject of this book – is a decade virtually ignored in most standard histories in France. Yet it was the moment of two significant spatial events: France’s expansion on a global scale, and, in the spring of 1871, the brief existence on the Paris Commune – the construction of the revolutionary urban space. Arguing that space, as a social fact, is always political and strategic, Kristin Ross has written a book that is at once a history and geography of the Commune’s anarchist culture – its political language and social relations, its values, strategies, and stances.

Central to her analysis of the Commune as a social space and oppositional culture is a close textual reading of Arthur Rimabaud’s poetry. His poems – a common thread running through the book – are one set of documents among many in Ross’s recreation of the Communard experience. Rimbaud, Paul Lafargue, and the social geographer Élisée Reclus serve as emblematic figures moving within and on the periphery of the Commune; in their resistance to the logic and economy of the capitalist conception of work, in their challenge to work itself as a term of identity, all three posed a threat to the existing order. Ross looks at these and other emancipatory notions as aspects of Communard life, each with an analogous strategy in Rimbaud’s poetry. Applying contemporary theory, to a wealth of little-known archival material, she has written a fresh, persuasive, and original book.
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