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  1. Libidinal Economy. Libidinal Economy ( French: Économie Libidinale) is a 1974 book by French philosopher Jean-François Lyotard. The book was composed following the ideological shift of the May 68 protests in France, whereupon Lyotard distanced himself from conventional critical theory and Marxism because he felt that they were still too ...

  2. In Libidinal Economy (1974), a work very much influenced by the Parisian student uprising of May 1968, Lyotard claimed that “desire” always escapes the generalizing and synthesizing activity inherent in rational thought; instead, reason and desire stand in a relationship of constant tension.

  3. Nov 7, 2016 · According to Lyotard, every political economy is libidinal: that intensity has no equivalent in currency does not rid the circuits of capital of the force of libidinal investment.

  4. In the libidinal philosophy Lyotard uses the idea of libidinal energy to describe events and the way they are interpreted or exploited, and he develops a philosophy of society and theory in terms of the economy of libidinal energies.

  5. Jul 13, 2015 · Libidinal economy pairs desire and currency and insists upon the uninhibited and rapid circulation of both to bring about some unimaginable societal transformation.

  6. First published in 1974, Libidinal Economy is a major work of twentieth century continental philosophy. In it, Lyotard develops the idea of economies driven by libidinal 'energies' or...

  7. Mar 22, 1993 · Libidinal Economy. Jean-Francois Lyotard. Indiana University Press, Mar 22, 1993 - Business & Economics - 275 pages. Lyotard is considered one of the most brilliant and influential of French...

  8. This is a philosophical development of the Freudian concept of 'libidinal economy' and one of Lyotard's most important works. In part a response to Deleuze and Guattari's Anti-Oedipus, it can...

  9. Libidinal Economy is a 1974 book by French philosopher Jean-François Lyotard. The book was composed following the ideological shift of the May 68 protests in France, whereupon Lyotard distanced himself from conventional critical theory and Marxism because he felt that they were still too structuralist and imposed a rigid "systematization of ...

  10. Sep 21, 2018 · Two years later, he published a work he later dubbed “my evil book”, Libidinal Economy ( Peregrinations, 13). This work remains an important thinking of immanence and what a body politic would be like if reduced only to its libidinal pleasures and the blockages that make institutions possible.