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Essaying Collective Life:Review of Benjamin P. Davis's Simone Weil's Political Philosophy Isabelle Laurenzi (bio) Benjamin P. Davis, Simone Weil's Political Philosophy: Field Notes from the Margins. Lanham, MD: Rowman being "out of place" and out of time; having a critical attitude grounded in one's current political and cultural environment; and developing one's thought over a lifetime, rather than dogmatically advancing a pure philosophy (4–8). In a careful analysis of Weil's method, Davis draws on Weil's own descriptions of her work and motivations from her notebooks and letters. He also discerns resonances between Weil's essays and the various forms of activism which immediately followed her writings. In the first substantive chapter, Davis characterizes Weil's method as doubly essayistic: it involved the essay as genre and alternately "inquiring" and "essaying," writing and testing ideas in life (15, 25). This is why for Davis, making sense of Weil's political philosophy requires attending to the immediate events of her life. Conversely, because being a philosopher involves a critical attitude towards the world one inhabits, scholars End Page 315 who overlook how Weil's writings were grounded in her own "essaying" activities may underestimate just how philosophical her work was. In five substantive chapters, Davis brings together Weil's political writings, both formal and informal. He aptly describes the subject of these writings as an extended, shifting analysis of collective life (4). Davis arranges his chapters in a tidy structure: each of the first four chapters focuses on political concepts that Weil critiqued. In the fifth chapter, Davis argues that Weil's critiques cohere in her more constructive contributions in The Need for Roots, published the year she died. Davis pairs each chapter with current discourses in political and critical theory: Weil's critique of revolution with discourses on resistance and resilience in feminist thought; her critique of colonialism with anticolonial thought on epistemology and grievability; her critique of marketized models of selfhood with critiques of neoliberal subjectivity; her critique of human rights with contemporary critiques of inclusion and tolerance; and her theory of building roots with contemporary considerations of community and belonging amidst continual racialized state violence. The topics chronologically mirror Weil's writing, allowing Davis to narrate biographic details as the chapters unfold. One motivation for reframing Weil as a political philosopher is to avoid the tendencies of both scholarly and cultural accounts of Weil to mythologize—and pathologize—her, whether...
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Isabelle Laurenzi
Theory & Event
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Isabelle Laurenzi (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e71600b6db64358768e761 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/tae.2024.a925047