A 1970 French interdisciplinary seminar on structuralism, organised by Gilbert Gadoffre, André Lichnerowicz and François Perroux, and attended by Suzanne Bachelard, Pierre Bourdieu, Georges Canguilhem, Michel Foucault, André Martinet, Jacques Monod, Clémence Ramnoux, Michel Serres, Gilbert Simondon and René Thom

An interdisciplinary seminar on structuralism was held in France in September 1970. Attended by a wide range of speakers, it was an interesting moment in the French reception of this trend in ‘French theory’. Back in October 2022 I posted a short account of this event, and said I was looking for more information. What follows is a revised and expanded account of this event, based on the sources I’ve been able to identify since.

I wrote about the much more famous 18-21 October 1966 Baltimore conference on structuralism in a previous piece in this series.

Founded after the Second World War, the Institut collégial européen organised a series of events, most of which were reported in their annual Bulletin. The literary historian Gilbert Gadoffre led the Institut, which was initially based at the Royaumont abbey north of Paris – a place which hosted a lot of philosophy colloquia among other events. In the immediate aftermath of the Second World War, it played an important role in bringing academics across Europe back together in scholarly discussion. Much later, the Institut was described as operating “on the margins of official institutions” and “less concerned with the conservation of a heritage than towards the breaking down of barriers between disciplines, cultures and traditions” (La Culture comme projet de société, p. 5). M.A. Screech’s obituary of Gadoffre, who died in 1995, or Derek Robbin’s longer tribute from 2024, give a sense of an extraordinary life. He was injured and captured in the Battle for France, briefly a prisoner of war, before playing an active role as a resistance fighter. He worked in the French zone of occupied Austria after the Allied victory. From 1947 to 1954 Gadoffre spent about half of each year at Royaumont organising courses and events.

Gadoffre had taught at the University of Manchester before the war, and returned there in 1954, before a few years at Berkeley in the mid-1960s, and then returning to Manchester for a third time as Professor of French in 1967. He was an inveterate organiser and editor, continuing the work begun at Royaumont. In September 1970, jointly with the Collège de France’s Séminaire interdisciplinaire, the Institut organised this event on structuralism. Alongside Gadoffre the other organisers of this event were André Lichnerowicz, who held a chair in mathematical physics at the Collège de France from 1952, and the economist François Perroux, who also had a chair at the Collège de France

The structuralism event was held at the Institut national des sciences et techniques nucléaires in Saclay, about 20 km southwest of Paris. The event had some funding from the Ministre de l’Education nationale, with Lichnerowicz requesting 10,000 francs on 28 March 1969 to organise the event. The Archives Nationales records for this indicate that the working title for the event was “Le structuralisme devant la sciences”.

The event was attended by a range of interesting people including Suzanne Bachelard, Pierre Bourdieu, Georges Canguilhem, Michel Foucault, André Martinet, Jacques Monod, Clémence Ramnoux, Michel Serres, Gilbert Simondon and René Thom. As the list of names indicates, it was a genuinely interdisciplinary event, with mathematicians, physicists, and biologists alongside the social scientists, philosophers and humanities scholars. But the names invited are not just those of the obvious ‘structuralists’, and several of those associated with this notional movement were not there, including Louis Althuser, Jacques Lacan and Claude Lévi-Strauss. Roland Barthes was invited but according to Gadoffre, after dithering for a while, declined (Gilbert Gadoffre, un humaniste révolutionnaire, p. 147).

The Bibliothèque nationale de France has a collection of the Institut collégial européen Bulletins, and the catalogue says they have 1966-1982 inclusive, but the sequence actually runs 1966-1969, 1971-1974, 1976-1982. There is no bulletin for 1970 in the Bibliothèque nationale collection, and I’ve not been able to find a copy elsewhere. It appears that no bulletin was published for that year. The bulletins were generally reproduced typescripts, not formal books, so it is possible one did appear which I’ve been unable to locate. (The Arsenal library listing has 1972-1976, though I’ve not checked there if they have one for 1975.)

The 1970 event was discussed in Le Monde by Gadoffre on 29 October 1970. The event was used to launch a series of conversations on the question of structuralism, some papers of which were published in an edited volume on Structure et dynamique des systèmes in 1976. This volume is not hard to find second-hand, as are several of the subsequent books in the Recherches Interdisciplinaires series, which report on ongoing conversations. There were ones on L’idée de régulation dans les sciencesAnalogie et connaissanceInformation et communication, and Projet et programmation, among others. Pierre Delattre had published his own study Système, structure, fonction, évolution in the series in 1971, with a preface by Lichnerowicz.

Structure et dynamique des systèmes includes a summary of the 1970 event on structuralism, made by André Malan, but not most of the papers from that event. Malan’s summary gives the title “Sciences, Structures, Structuralisme”. There are also some papers which may be from the event in the volume, notably ones from André Martinet and René Thom. Malan however gives a good survey of what happened. He summarises the way structure is understood by mathematicians, physical scientists, and biologists, based on presentations at the event, before summarising how it is understood across the exact sciences. He then moves to the way that the history of sciences might complicate the present-day understandings being presented. He then shifts to ‘structuralism’ in the human sciences, linguistics, sociology, anthropology, economics, mythology, and modern literature.

From the way Malan reports Foucault’s contribution (pp. 177-78), it seems it was very close to a part of lecture he gave at Keio University in Tokyo in October 1970, which was published in Japan in 1972 and is included in Dits et écrits as “Révenir à l’histoire” (also available online) and translated in Essential Works as “Return to History”. There is a manuscript which looks like this lecture in Foucault’s archive at the Bibliothèque nationale de France (NAF28730, box 70, folder 2). In the Japanese version of the lecture, Foucault discusses both the Annales school, particularly Pierre and Huguette Chaunu’s mammoth Séville et l’Atlantique, and Georges Dumézil. Foucault suggests there are parallelsbetween a structuralist analysis of change and “historical analyses of types of events and types of duration” (“Révenir à l’histoire”, 280; “Return to History”, 430). He adds that what is called structuralism and contemporary debates in history provide “theoretical instruments by means of which one can – contrary to the old idea of continuity – really grasp both the discontinuity of events and the transformation of societies” (“Révenir à l’histoire” 280-81; “Return to History”, 430-31).

From Malan’s report it is clear that Foucault mainly spoke about the work of Dumézil at Saclay, which I have discussed before, especially in “Foucault and Dumézil on Antiquity”. Foucault takes as his example Dumézil’s 1942 book Horace et les Curiaces, which examines the Roman legend of the fight between three Horatii and three Curiatii. (The main classical sources are Livy, Ab urbe condita, Book 1, 24-26 and Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Roman AntiquitiesIII, 14-22.)Dumézil examines parallels between this story and other mythic traditions, particularly the story of Cú Chulainn in Ireland. Foucault is particularly interested in the way that Dumézil does not just look at resemblances between myths, as the older comparative mythology did, but rather analyses them within a “system of differences”. Foucault, as reported by Malan, suggests that this approach to myth is “much more rigorous than that used by Jung in his research on archetypes” (p. 177). This is for two reasons – Dumézil works with a corpus defined in advance, whereas Jung is less limited in his comparison; and Jung works with the external discipline of psychoanalysis, whereas Dumézil is working internally with the elements in the ensemble itself (pp. 177-78).

Malan also reports on André Martinet’s contribution to the Saclay event. He indicates that the use of the term ‘structure’ in several other disciplines is due to its technical usage in linguistics, which he traces from Saussure to the phonological manifesto of Nikolai Trubetzkoy and Roman Jakobson in 1928, as part of the work of the Prague Linguistic Circle. But the different sense of the term ‘structure’ can also be found in linguistics itself. He stresses linguistics sees both a “functional and structural” role in language, with a balance between function, which in language is primarily communication, and the structure, which sets the other elements in relation – experience, state of mind, and speaker. “This conception is structural, because for phonologists, language is a structured system in which everything fits together” (p. 178). Martinet then moved to discuss Louis Hjelmslev’s attempt to eliminate diachrony, though he considers this a failed project. Martinet recognises that the American story of structuralism in linguistics, from Bloomfield to Chomsky, runs on a different trajectory (pp. 179-80).

The discussions moved to sociology, presented by Bourdieu (pp. 180-81), the way Lévi-Strauss brought a linguistic model into anthropology for the study of kinship, and later myths (pp. 181-82) and the use of models in economics (pp. 182-84). The discussion of mythology here seems to have been informed by contributions by Ramnoux (who I write about here) and the anthropologist and ethnologist Jean Guiart (pp. 185-86). Interestingly, the example Ramnoux gives is not from Greek myth, but Dumézil’s analysis of the five Pandava brothers from the Mahabharata, which he argues, following a reading by Stig Wikander, are semi-historicised versions of five deities. With literature, the example is Jakobson and Lévi-Strauss’s analysis of Baudelaire’s “Les Chats”. Malan adds:

One could respond with Umberto Eco that it is necessary to distinguish here several types of structuralism: a methodological structuralism, practiced by scholars; an ontological structuralism, based on faith in a transcendental model, excluding diachrony; and finally, a genetic structuralism, accepting the diachronic dimension for either political (Marxism) or cultural reasons (p. 186).

Gadoffre brough in the example of Jean Starobinski’s analyses of stylistics, and the relation between an analysis he calls a “dry criticism”, where the model used to analyse the work distances itself from it, and “a more nuanced criticism, which does not allow the work to be reduced to the models used to explain it” (p. 186).

Georges Canguilhem provided some conclusions to the event. In my 2024 article “Canguilhem, Dumézil, Hyppolite” I discuss this. 

[Canguilhem] notes that it is important to distinguish uses of the term structuralism, from a popular term “which few academics would claim, not even Michel Foucault”; from some “serious, methodological research carried out within universities (Dumézil, Lévi-Strauss, Martinet)”, and its use in contexts “outside the university, sometimes anti-university, expressed in literary journals and used as a polemical weapon”. Canguilhem recognises that it is “opposed to the primacy of the subject”, but qualifies its relation to history, suggesting that for Foucault at least there is “a historical succession, but with ruptures”. Most importantly, perhaps, he distinguishes between determinism and structuralism. It is clear that Canguilhem finds some affinities between this way of understanding structuralism – in part in relation to Foucault, but also to Dumézil, Lévi-Strauss and Martinet – and his own work. Foucault’s complicated relation to structuralism is becoming clearer in the light of newly available sources; Canguilhem’s perhaps remains to be fully explored (p. 44; the quotes are from Malan, “Colloque de Saclay”, p. 188).

Lichnerowicz’s conclusions to the seminar suggest that it is important to distinguish between mathematical structures and what he calls “(non-naïve) structures concerning fields of the real” (Malan, p. 189). Lichnerowicz also marked the ways that linguistics made a distinction between structure (i.e. the synchronic) and the diachronic. He thought a distinction needed to be made between “scientific structuralism” and “a marginal structuralism endowed with a disturbing emotional power (this involves both a fashionable factor and a form of pseudo-scientific terrorism)”. In thinking about the “scientific approach within the humanities”, this raised for this mathematician some important considerations:

At the same time, we must affirm the unity of the ambition of scientific thought. There is a serious danger in taking refuge between the specificity of empirical facts and historical differences between disciplines. The human sciences are not unique simply because they deal with humanity, which does not preclude the existence of particular obstacles. No one is obliged to claim to be a scientist, but whoever does must recognise its unity and accept its imperatives (p. 190).

It is regrettable that we only have Malan’s summary of the event, and that the words may not be what was said at the time. But it is an interesting insight into a debate in which these different disciplines were at least trying to speak to each other.

Since I wrote “Canguilhem, Dumézil, Hyppolite” and “Foucault and Dumézil on Antiquity”, Daniele Lorenzini asked me to write a piece on “Foucault and Structuralism”, for The Foucauldian Mind collection he edited. My analysis there builds on the work I did for my series of books on Foucault, especially The Archaeology of Foucault. The Saclay event is interesting for this story because it is one of the few times Foucault was willing to be associated with debates around structuralism. Later that year, in early December, in his inaugural lecture to the Collège de France, Foucault had outlined his own project and then said: “And now let those with limited vocabularies, the aphasiacs of theory, say – if they prefer its sound to its meaning – that this is structuralism” (Leçon inaugurale, p. 32). Perhaps recognising the inappropriateness of the metaphor, the more widely circulated Gallimard version of this text, L’Ordre du discours, removes the line about aphasia (p. 72). Foucault’s comment in the English preface to The Order of Things about the ignorance of associating him with structuralism is well-known and dates from the same year (p. xiv). I say a bit more about how Foucault responded to J.M. Pelorson on this point here.

The interdisciplinary seminar series is discussed in a dialogue between Gadoffre and his wife Alice Gadoffre-Staath (Gilbert Gadoffre, un humaniste révolutionnaire, pp. 144-49). That led me to her own De la résistance à l’Europe, where in Chapter XI she discusses the Institut – after a substantial first part on her Resistance activities. Other sources are not as useful as I’d initially hoped. Gadoffre published a collection of papers from three events on history held by the Institut collégial européen, Certitudes et incertitudes de l’histoire. I read the subtitle as histories of the Institut, but these are less interdisciplinary than other volumes and more a set of reflections on history and historiography. There are contributions by Philippe Ariès, Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie, and Arnaldo Momigliano, and a preface by Pierre Chaunu. A better source for the history is the Festschrift for Gadoffre, edited by Yves Bonnefoy, Lichnérowicz and M.-P. Schützenberger (eds.), Vérité poétique et verité scientifique: Offert à Gilbert Gadoffre. This has a series of short pieces in the first part on the history of the Institut. This volume includes a bibliography of Gadoffre’s work, but it doesn’t indicate the reports of the Institut collégial européen. In the edited works it mentions Certitudes et incertitudes de l’histoire, but not the interdisciplinary seminars produced from their events.

References

Yves Bonnefoy, André Lichnerowicz, and M.-P. Schützenberger (eds.), Vérité poétique et verité scientifique: Offert à Gilbert Gadoffre, Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1989.

Pierre and Huguette Chaunu, Séville et l’Atlantique (1504–1650), Paris: SEVPEN, 12 volumes, 1955-60.

Pierre Delattre, Système, structure, fonction, évolution: Essai d’analyse épistémologique, Paris: Maloine-Doine, 1971.

Georges Dumézil, Horace et les curiaces, Paris: Gallimard, 1942.

Stuart Elden, The Archaeology of Foucault, Cambridge: Polity, 2023.

Stuart Elden, “Canguilhem, Dumézil, Hyppolite: Georges Canguilhem and his Contemporaries,” Revue internationale de philosophie 307, 2024, 27-48.

Stuart Elden, “Foucault and Dumézil on Antiquity”, Journal of the History of Ideas 85 (3), 2024, 571-600.

Stuart Elden, “Foucault and Structuralism”, The Foucauldian Mind, ed. Daniele Lorenzini, London: Routledge, forthcoming 2026.

Michel Foucault, “Foreword to the English Edition”, The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences, New York: Pantheon, 1970, ix-xiv.

Michel Foucault, Leçon inaugurale faite le Mercredi 2 décembre 1970, Paris: Collège de France, 1971; revised version as L’Ordre du discours, Paris: Gallimard, 1971. (On the differences, see here.)

Michel Foucault, “Révenir à l’histoire”, in Dits et écrits, eds. Daniel Defert and François Ewald, Paris: Gallimard, 1994, Vol II, 268-81; “Return to History”, trans. Robert Hurley, in Essential Works Volume Two: Aesthetics, Method, and Epistemology, ed. James D. Faubion, New York: The New Press, 1998, 419-32.

Gilbert Gadoffre (ed.) Certitudes et incertitudes de l’Histoire: trois colloques sur l’Histoire de l’Institut collégial européen, Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1987.

Gilbert Gadoffre (ed.) La Culture comme projet de société: Un colloque interdisciplinaire, Loches: Éditions Universitaires, 1991.

Gilbert Gadoffre and Alice Gadoffre-Staath, Gilbert Gadoffre, un humaniste révolutionnaire: Entretiens avec Alice Gadoffre-Staath, Grâne/Paris: Créaphis, 2002.

Alice Gadoffre-Staath, De la resistance à l’Europe, Montpellier: Éditions Espaces, 1994.

André Lichnerowicz and Gilbert Gadoffre (eds.), La Vérité est-elle scientifique? Séminaire interdisciplinaire du Collège de France, [Paris]: Editions Universitaires, 1991.

A. Lichnerowicz, F. Perroux and G. Gadoffre eds. Structure et dynamique des systèmes, Paris: Maloine, 1976.

A. Lichnerowicz et al, L’idee de regulation dans les sciences, Paris: Maloine, 1977.

A. Lichnerowicz, F. Perroux and G. Gadoffre eds. Information et communication, Paris: Maloine, 1983.

A. Lichnerowicz, F. Perroux and G. Gadoffre, Analogie et connaissance: séminaires interdisciplinaires, Paris: Maloine, two volumes (“Aspects historiques” and “De la poésie à la science”), 1980-81.

A. Lichnerowicz, F. Perroux and G. Gadoffre eds. Projet et programmation, Paris: Maloine, 1986.

Daniele Lorenzini ed. The Foucauldian Mind, London: Routledge, forthcoming 2026. 

André Malan, “Colloque de Saclay”, in Structure et dynamique des systèmes, ed. A. Lichnerowicz, F. Perroux and G. Gadoffre, Paris: Maloine, 1976, 165-90.

Derek Robbins, “Gilbert Gadoffre: Institutionalising Cultural Reproduction”, in Stuart Jones (ed.), Manchester Minds: A University History of Ideas, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2024, 279-296.

M. A. Screech, “Obituary: Professor Gilbert Gadoffre”, The Independent, 25 March 1995, https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/obituary-professor-gilbert-gadoffre-1612725.html

Archives

Archives nationales, Education nationale: Mission des relations internationales (1973), Institut collégial européen, 19770555/3, F.17 bis 18582

Bulletin – Institut collégial européen, 1966-1969, 1971-1974, 1976-1982, https://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb34415955s

Fonds Gilbert Gadoffre, Université Gustave Eiffel, https://cipen.univ-gustave-eiffel.fr/fonds-gadoffre

Fonds Michel Foucault, NAF 28730, Bibliothèque nationale de France


This is the 61st post of a weekly series, posted every Sunday throughout 2025, and so far each week in 2026. The posts are short essays with indications of further reading and sources. They are not as formal as something I’d try to publish more conventionally, but are hopefully worthwhile as short sketches of histories and ideas. They are usually tangential to my main writing focus, a home for spare parts, asides, dead-ends and possible futures. I hope there is some interest in them. They are provisional and suggestions are welcome. A few, usually shorter, pieces in a similar style have been posted mid-week. I’m not sure I’ll keep to a weekly rhythm in 2026, but there will be at least a few more pieces.

The full chronological list of ‘Sunday histories’ is here, with a thematic organisation here.

[post above updated to correct the misspelling of Simondon’s name.]

Posted in Clémence Ramnoux, Georges Canguilhem, Michel Foucault, Michel Serres, Pierre Bourdieu, Sunday Histories, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Onur Erdur, School of the South: The Colonial Roots of French Theory – trans. Andrew Brown, Polity, July 2026

Onur Erdur, School of the South: The Colonial Roots of French Theory – trans. Andrew Brown, Polity, July 2026

Michel Foucault, Pierre Bourdieu, Roland Barthes, Jacques Derrida, Hélène Cixous, Jean-François Lyotard, Étienne Balibar, Jacques Rancière: these were among the luminaries of France’s golden age of theory from the 1960s to the 1990s. What is less well-known is that all of these thinkers spent time in North Africa and their ideas were shaped by their encounters with French colonialism. In his remarkable history of ideas in eight portraits, Onur Erdur uncovers the colonial roots of French theory.

Erdur’s search for these colonial roots leads him to Algiers, where the young Pierre Bourdieu did his military service in the middle of the Algerian war; to the coastal village of Sidi Bou Saïd north of Tunis, where Michel Foucault developed an attitude of philosophical hedonism between sunbathing, walks on the beach and ritualised body culture; and to Casablanca, where Roland Barthes fantasised about becoming a novelist. How did these intellectuals end up in these colonial situations? How did they behave there? And how did the experiences of colonial life affect their theoretical works and ideas? French theory developed a style of thinking that opposed identity and stood for difference, that was against the centre and for the periphery. This book shows how this style of thinking emerged not in the hallowed rooms of Parisian libraries and universities, but on the beach in Tunis and in the streets of Algiers.

Developing a new perspective on the history of ideas, this enthralling book subverts the subversive and shows that some of the best-known works and ideas of the late twentieth century cannot be fully understood without taking account of their origins in encounters with French colonialism in North Africa.

A translation of Schule des Südens: Die kolonialen Wurzeln der französischen Theorie

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Elizabeth Campbell, Museum Worthy: Nazi Art Plunder in Postwar Western Europe – Oxford University Press, August 2024

Elizabeth Campbell, Museum Worthy: Nazi Art Plunder in Postwar Western Europe – Oxford University Press, August 2024

I’m late in noticing this, but I’ve just read her previous book, Defending National Treasures: French Art and Heritage Under Vichy (Stanford University Press, 2011), which was very interesting.

Art looting is commonly recognized as a central feature of Nazi expropriation, in both the Third Reich and occupied territories. After the war, the famed Monuments Men (and women) recovered several hundred thousand pieces from the Germans’ makeshift repositories in churches, castles, and salt mines. Well publicized restitution cases, such as that of Gustav Klimt’s luminous painting featured in the film Woman in Gold, illustrate the legacy of Nazi looting in the art world today. But what happened to looted art that was never returned to its rightful owners?

In France, Belgium, and the Netherlands, postwar governments appropriated the most coveted unclaimed works for display in museums, embassies, ministries, and other public buildings. Following cultural property norms of the time, the governments created custodianships over the unclaimed pieces, without using archives in their possession to carry out thorough provenance (ownership) research. This policy extended the dispossession of Jewish owners wrought by the Nazis and their collaborators well into the twenty-first century.

The custodianships included more than six hundred works in Belgium, five thousand works in the Netherlands, and some two thousand in France. They included paintings by traditional and modern masters, such as Rembrandt, Cranach, Rubens, Van der Weyden, Tiepolo, Picasso, and Matisse. This appropriation of plundered assets endured without controversy until the mid-1990s, when activists and journalists began challenging the governments’ right to hold these items, ushering in a period of cultural property litigation that endures to this day. Including interviews that have never before been published, Museum Worthy deftly examines the appropriation of Nazi art plunder by postwar governments and highlights the increasingly successful postwar art recovery and restitution process.

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Fay Bound-Alberti, The Face: A Cultural History – Allen Lane, February 2026

Fay Bound-Alberti, The Face: A Cultural History – Allen Lane, February 2026

What’s in a face?

The face is the only part of the body where all the senses come together and, over the course of human history, has come to represent who we are as individuals. We unlock our phones with facial recognition; we have our faces stamped in our passports; and although our faces may change over the course of our lives – whether through ageing, accident, illness or lifestyle – they remain a foundational marker of identity.

In The Face, cultural historian Fay Bound-Alberti explores the ways humans have interpreted faces and how they have shaped our ideas of morality, social hierarchy, psychology and so much more, revealing some of the biases that inform our everyday lives. She charts how new technologies and cultural innovations have transformed our conception of selfhood over time – from the growth of portraiture in the Renaissance and the mass production of mirrors and photography in the nineteenth century, to twenty-first century developments, such as digital avatars and face transplants.

Bringing together a wealth of fascinating research, interviews and illuminating personal narratives, Bound-Alberti probes beneath the surface to ask what our faces really say about us.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Peter C. Grace, The Intelligence Intellectuals: Social Scientists and the Making of the CIA – Georgetown University Press, January 2026

Peter C. Grace, The Intelligence Intellectuals: Social Scientists and the Making of the CIA – Georgetown University Press, January 2026

The untold story of how America’s brightest academic minds revolutionized intelligence analysis at the CIA

In the early days of the Cold War, the United States faced a crisis in intelligence analysis. A series of intelligence failures in 1949 and 1950, including the failure to warn about the North Korean invasion of South Korea, made it clear that gut instinct and traditional practices were no longer sufficient for intelligence analysis in the nuclear age. The new director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Walter Bedell Smith, had a mandate to reform it.

Based on new archival research in declassified documents and the participants’ personal papers, The Intelligence Intellectuals reveals the neglected history of how America’s brightest academic minds were recruited by the CIA to revolutionize intelligence analysis during this critical period. Peter C. Grace describes how the scientifically sound analysis methods that they introduced significantly helped the United States gain an advantage in the Cold War, and these new analysts legitimized the role of the recently created CIA in the national security community. Grace demonstrates how these professors—such as William Langer from Harvard, Sherman Kent from Yale, and Max Millikan from MIT—developed systematic approaches to intelligence analysis that shaped the CIA’s methodology for decades to come.

Readers interested in the history of the Cold War and in intelligence, scholars of intelligence studies, Cold War historians, and intelligence practitioners seeking to understand their craft’s foundations will all value this insightful history about the place of social science in national security.

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Martin Heidegger, Being and Time: An Annotated Translation – trans. Cyril Welch, Yale University Press, February 2026 and New Books discussion

Martin Heidegger, Being and Time: An Annotated Translation – trans. Cyril Welch, Yale University Press, February 2026

New Books discussion with Stephen Dozeman – thanks to dmf for the link

A new, more accessible translation of one of the most important philosophical works of the twentieth century
 
Martin Heidegger’s seminal work Sein und Zeit (Being and Time) is an exploration of the founding conditions of our being in any world, and of the varying revelations that allow for radically different experiences of things. But the very originality of the work, and the relentless stream of neologisms that Heidegger used to express concepts for which philosophy had no vocabulary, make the book a daunting read. This translation by Cyril Welch, classroom tested for more than twenty years, is far more readable than previous versions. It includes explanatory footnotes, as well as a translator’s preface that sets out Heidegger’s overall purpose and strategy in this complex and essential work.

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Luisa T Schneider, Robbert Dillema, and Paola Rebughini eds. Agency Beyond Confinement Rethinking the Relationship Between Agency and Structure in the Contemporary World – Routledge, March 2026

Luisa T Schneider, Robbert Dillema, and Paola Rebughini eds. Agency Beyond Confinement Rethinking the Relationship Between Agency and Structure in the Contemporary World – Routledge, March 2026

What does it mean to be confined and what forms of life, resistance, and care emerge in response? Agency Beyond Confinement rethinks the social life of confinement by refusing binaries: structure vs. agency, reform vs. resistance, care vs. control.

Across prisons, homes, gardens, seas, and cities, this volume explores how material, affective, and institutional confinement is shaped and reshaped through recursive processes of structure and agency. It argues that confinement appears not as total enclosure, but as a genre of design, narration, abandonment, and control that is written, inhabited, and rewritten by those it seeks to contain.

Bringing together case studies from Europe, Latin America, and Africa, this volume features an interdisciplinary group of scholars who refuse academic silos. Across methods, themes, and theoretical lineages, they examine how confinement takes shape, how it can be re-theorized, and how it might be undone. As such this book is essential reading for scholars, students, and practitioners in anthropology, carceral studies, cultural studies, critical legal theory, and related fields seeking to understand—and unmake—the conditions of confinement today.

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Indo-European Thought research resources updated – Benveniste, Saussure, Dumézil

I’ve updated the list of English translations of Émile Benveniste’s work on this site to include a couple of articles.

I’ve not shared many research resources from my Indo-European thought project, but there is a list of Ferdinand de Saussure’s notes on German legends – and cross-references between the different editions of these manuscripts. If you’ve ever tried to find one of these texts, which are presented in some confusing and overlapping ways in different, often hard-to-find collections, I hope this concordance is useful.

There are a few other resources, including some textual comparison for texts by Georges Dumézil, and audio and video recordings of him, here.

Much more extensive research resources on Foucault are listed here – bibliographies, textual comparisons, audio and video links, etc. A few other things are listed here. Generally these are things I produced while researching something, and which I’ve shared in the hope someone else might find them useful. Corrections welcome, of course.

Posted in Emile Benveniste, Ferdinand de Saussure, Georges Dumézil, Mapping Indo-European Thought in Twentieth Century France, Michel Foucault, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Christopher Cusack, Bridget English and Matthew L. Reznicek eds. The Corpse in Modern Irish Literature – Liverpool University Press, February 2026

Christopher Cusack, Bridget English and Matthew L. Reznicek eds. The Corpse in Modern Irish Literature – Liverpool University Press, February 2026

From the bodies rotting by the wayside in Famine fiction, Synge’s sodden corpses and Joyce’s dead, to Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill’s talking corpses and the unburied and dissected remains of Celtic Tiger fiction, the figure of the corpse is ubiquitous in Irish writing. This collection examines the Irish corpse as a conceptually rich centrepoint with multiple differently signifying implications across this historical period as expressed in different social, political and creative contexts.

Taking Irish literature’s obsession with death as its starting point, The Corpse in Modern Irish Literature demonstrates the wide-ranging implications of this fixation, extending it through the contexts of the tragedies of the Irish past and the emergence of new identities in the wake of colonial modernity. In their range of authors and genres from the eighteenth to the twenty-first century, the chapters bring into focus patterns of change and continuity and extend current understanding of the Gothic mode, the national tale, the Irish modernist novel, Irish-language poetry, the elegiac mode, comic and tragic revivalist writings and the generic complexity of autofiction and contemporary fiction. In so doing, The Corpse in Modern Irish Literature makes a significant intervention in Irish studies, Gothic studies, death studies and medical and health humanities.

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Pierre-Olivier Dittmar, L’invention de l’animal: Essai d’anthropologie médiévale – Gallimard, March 2026

Pierre-Olivier Dittmar, L’invention de l’animal: Essai d’anthropologie médiévale – Gallimard, March 2026

Il n’y avait pas d’animal au Moyen Âge. Des cochons et des oiseaux, des bœufs et des belettes, des lapins et des ours, des loups et des abeilles, des licornes même, oui. Mais si les animaux étaient présents en nombre, partageaient leur territoire et bien d’autres relations avec les humains, l’animal en tant que catégorie, tel que nous le connaissons aujourd’hui, n’existait pas. Or l’invention de ce concept ne crée pas seulement une fracture entre les humains et le reste du monde ; elle produit aussi m1second partage, moins visible, plus intime, qui donne naissance à une « part animale » au sein de chaque individu.
L’objet de cet ouvrage est de témoigner d’un monde, d’une période, qui ignorait cette double coupure et l’a fait émerger. Au croisement de l’histoire religieuse et de l’histoire intellectuelle, de l’histoire de l’art ou de celle de l’alimentation, il met en lumière, notamment par les images, un mode particulier de rapport au vivant et un moment décisif de l’histoire des sociétés occidentales.

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