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We too often forget that the name “intellectual” itself is a French invention. There is a tendency, because the French exported the concept very successfully in the past, to try to interpret any thinking phenomenon as an “intellectual” one, and to believe that where there are no proper intellectuals, there is no thinking. However, as Stefan Collini brilliantly demonstrated in Absent Minds, it is France that is the exception rather than the other way around. The way it has promoted the figure of the intellectual is unprecedented in history, and it would be pointless to try to find the same patterns in other countries which have other traditions. British thinkers, in that perspective, have been sceptical of the term “intellectual” for two reasons: they felt superior to what they saw as French immaturity or grandiloquence, but at the same time inferior to them, because they watched the exceptional treatment given to intellectuals in France with great envy.

Just because a country remains reluctant to recognise its intellectual character doesn’t mean it doesn’t have one. Conversely, just because a country constantly boasts about its tradition of thought doesn’t mean that the tradition is still alive. Progressive thinkers such as Sartre have always preferred — isn’t it much easier? — to paint large abstract pictures, and then, when reality contradicted them, to turn a blind eye and blame someone else — the bourgeoisie, usually.

British thinkers, from Adam Smith and David Hume to Friedrich Hayek (Britain being his adopted country), from Thomas Hobbes, John Locke and John Stuart Mill to John Gray, from Edmund Burke to Michael Oakeshott and Roger Scruton, have always started from the facts and the patterns of life and tried to make sense of them, without being obsessed by the fact that they were or were not thinkers. British people think because they don’t think they think. I wish the French would do the same.
 

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Anonymous
June 22nd, 2015
9:06 PM
Perhaps France's lack of Jews explains France's lack of intellectualism.

Zero de Fou
June 7th, 2015
10:06 PM
I life in a tiny village near a small town in south-west France and I cannot imagine anywhere further from intellectualism than here. It is really important to remember that when one talks of the intellectual life of France, one means only Paris - the rest of France, especially rural France, is an intellectual desert.

daniel king
June 6th, 2015
11:06 AM
It is always subjective on the judgement of the critic.Thus, in this review Levi-Strauss in the writers opinion is "great" and Foucault "interesting but strange". I personally would reverse the names and agree with the judgement.

Anonymous
June 4th, 2015
5:06 PM
This author clearly knows nothing beyond the European/Western world by saying things like "The way it has promoted the figure of the intellectual is unprecedented in history, and it would be pointless to try to find the same patterns in other countries which have other traditions." Whichever tradition or culture the author comes from, it is no any more hopeful than the French school. Indeed, the western mind as a whole is "closing" if they still think in a tone as if the west = the world

D.l.moore
June 4th, 2015
4:06 AM
Think about all those people who circulated in France to find out that communism as a theory was such a fine thing and took it back home and murdered millions. It would be funny were it not for the death in the paths of these utopian intellectualists. (By the way, I think we should define Utopianisms as failed dreams of intellectuals). Shall we all get in our lotus positions and do our yoga contemplations of our navels to ignore that the French way was NOT superior and largely destructive.

al
June 3rd, 2015
10:06 PM
Americans liked to believe that they had imported the best of French thought and the world was aping them. But France refused to join the Coalition of the Willing and 'French theory' was dropped in US. This is just the externalist view, what really happened is an other story. Also, De Gaulle and Hollande may be French but it is a moot point if they have ever done some thinking.

Saksin
June 3rd, 2015
8:06 PM
A judicious take on French intellectualism. If the fall of Communism is a recent factor that has helped unnerve France's intellectual elite, it has labored under a more persistent handicap for more than two centuries: somehow it never caught on to the fact that the French Revolution was a fiasko. Which in turn helps explain, circuitously, why the fall of Communism affected it as it did.

The Sanity Inspector
June 3rd, 2015
6:06 PM
It's no surprise that author and reviewer would have such widely differing impressions of French intellectual life. If the French character were so simple that it could be summed up in one tidy, interlaced exposition, it wouldn't be interesting enough to study, nor potent enough to have had such an influence on the world.

Dan
June 3rd, 2015
5:06 PM
If the author of this review finds Sartre, Deleuze, Bourdieu, et al so unintelligible, perhaps she should do a bit more reading or take some classes on the subject instead of prematurely publishing this angry school-boy judgment of mid/late 20th century French thought.

Anonymous
June 3rd, 2015
4:06 PM
funny to see Roger Scruton smuggled in as a "thinker." Or was this by way of a punchline?

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