Turning On the Mind: French Philosophers on Television

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University of Chicago Press, 2007 - Biography & Autobiography - 334 pages
In 1951, the eight o’clock nightly news reported on Jean-Paul Sartre for the first time. By the end of the twentieth century, more than 3,500 programs dealing with philosophy and its practitioners—including Bachelard, Badiou, Foucault, Lyotard, and Lévy—had aired on French television. According to Tamara Chaplin, this enduring commitment to bringing the most abstract and least visual of disciplines to the French public challenges our very assumptions about the incompatibility of elite culture and mass media. Indeed, it belies the conviction that television is inevitably anti-intellectual and the quintessential archenemy of the book.
Chaplin argues that the history of the televising of philosophy is crucial to understanding the struggle over French national identity in the postwar period. Linking this history to decolonization, modernization, and globalization, Turning On the Mind claims that we can understand neither the markedly public role that philosophy came to play in French society during the late twentieth century nor the renewed interest in ethics and political philosophy in the early twenty-first unless we acknowledge the work of television. Throughout, Chaplin insists that we jettison presumptions about the anti-intellectual nature of the visual field, engages critical questions about the survival of national cultures in a globalizing world, and encourages us to rethink philosophy itself, ultimately asserting that the content of the discipline is indivisible from the new media forms in which it has found expression.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
The Cultural Politics of Philosophical Celebrity 19511968
17
Philosophy and the Early Television Book Show 19531968
52
From Educational Television to Cultural Spectacle 19641974
87
The New Philosophers and Morality for the Masses19741986
130
Bucking the Ratings Antigone Abraham Heidegger and theHolocaust 19871992
179
Conclusion
226
Notes
241
Bibliography
285
Index
315
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About the author (2007)

Tamara Chaplin is professor of modern European history and Lynn M. Martin Professorial Scholar (2023-2026) at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

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