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portada There Was No Revolution. Reflections on Property, Power and the Servile Condition
Type
Physical Book
Publisher
Year
2026
Language
English
Pages
206
Format
Paperback
ISBN13
9781509567577

There Was No Revolution. Reflections on Property, Power and the Servile Condition

Catherine Malabou;Carolyn Shread (Author) · Polity · Paperback

There Was No Revolution. Reflections on Property, Power and the Servile Condition - Catherine Malabou;Carolyn Shread

New Book Imported to Taiwan
Delivery: 24 Jul - 04 Aug Shipping: 12 to 14 business days.
NT$ 887
NT$ 887

Synopsis "There Was No Revolution. Reflections on Property, Power and the Servile Condition"

In her new book, Catherine Malabou argues that the French Revolution existed in name only, not in reality - privileges disappeared only on the surface and the old forms of domination persisted in structuring everyday life. And sure enough, French citizens soon came to ask: how is it that we are falling back into the same patterns of servitude and privilege?

In developing this argument, Malabou echoes the conclusion drawn by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon whose work, What is Property?, written in 1840, claimed that there was no revolution. Proudhon witnessed how, in the aftermath of the French Revolution, feudal relations persisted and monarchy was restored.  He connected the persistence of feudalism and servitude to his critique of property. For Proudhon, property is but another name for domination: ‘property is theft’, he famously declared, by which he meant that private property starts with a theft of memory and meaning that transforms continuous bondage into a promise of emancipation. This marks the specificity of the anarchist critique of property and it led Proudhon to conclude ‘I am an anarchist’.

Malabou connects her re-reading of Proudhon’s masterpiece with our own political situation today, more than 200 years after the French Revolution. She examines how the enduring domination which is central to private property infiltrates various aspects of the modern world, from the legacies of colonialism and slavery to work and politics. This timely re-assessment of the relation between property and domination will be of interest to students of philosophy and politics and to anyone concerned with today’s key political questions.

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The book is written in English.
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