'Stop Thief! is essential reading for all those committed to understanding and overcoming historic rifts between anarchy (popularly identified with leaderless politics, anti-globalization movements, libertarianism and the deconstructed "administrative state") and anarchism as philosophy. Boldly contending that "philosophers of anarchy have never conceptualized the anarchist dimension of their concepts of anarchy," Malabou devotes chapters to major thinkers - Rainer Schürmann, Emmanuel Levinas, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Giorgio Agamben and Jacques Rancière - whose work has been qualified as "post-anarchist" in spirit and critical method. Affirming philosophical anarchism with conviction and originality, Malabou reviews historic critiques of political foundationalism and theories of state power that have sought to undo the arké of sovereignty, from Plato, Aristotle and Hobbes to Heidegger and Derrida. She brings to light myriad ways in which structures of anti-domination, destituent power, thwarted mastery and inoperative command arise from their own recursive, self-defeating, autoimmunitarian and negational logics. Older, semi-forgotten anarchist ideas - like mutualism or alternatives to propertied notions of selfhood and privatized right - are brought back and rendered re-usable for a contemporary revolutionary praxis. And with these reinvigorated conceptual frameworks, protean forms of revolt come into relief, positioned against the toxic fusion of "government violence and the uberization of life" that underwrites late liberal, authoritarian political cultures of today.'Emily Apter, Julius Silver Professor of Comparative Literature, New York University
Translator's Note1 Surveying the Horizon2 Dissociating Anarchism from Anarchy3 On the Virtue of Chorus Leaders: Archy and Anarchy in Aristotle's Politics4 Ontological Anarchy. From Greece to the Andes: Traveling with Reiner Schürmann5 Ethical Anarchy: The Heteronomies of Emmanuel Levinas6 "Responsible Anarchism": Jacques Derrida's Drive for Power7 Anarcheology: Michel Foucault's Last Government8 Profanatory Anarchy: Giorgio Agamben's Zone9 Staging Anarchy: Jacques Rancière Without WitnessesConclusion: Being an AnarchistNotesIndex
Catherine Malabou is Professor of Philosophy at Kingston University London.