1st Edition

Epistolary Narratives of Love, Gender and Agonistic Politics An Arendtian Approach

By Maria Tamboukou Copyright 2024
194 Pages
by Routledge

194 Pages
by Routledge

194 Pages
by Routledge

This book revolves around epistolary narratives of women political theorists and activists, following traces of Hannah Arendt’s philosophical approaches to love and agonistic politics. Arend’s interlocutors are four revolutionary women in the long durée of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in Europe and the USA: the romantic socialist Désirée Véret-Gay, the Marxist Rosa Luxemburg, the... Read more

Acknowledgements

Introduction: Rethinking Love through Arendtian Eyes

Chapter 1: Feeling, Reading, Thinking, Writing Love

Chapter 2: Portraits of Moments in BiosHistory Entanglements

Chapter 3: Archival Agonism, Resistibility and Memory Work

Chapter 4: Amor Mundi, or the Reality of Utopian Love

Chapter 5: Epistolary Waves, Politics, Memory and the Force of Love

Chapter 6: Nobody Knows what Love Can Do

Chapter 7: Even Workers Fall in Love: Eros in the Labour Movement

Conclusion: Epistolary Poethics and Agonistic Politics

 

Index

Biography

Maria Tamboukou is Professor of Feminist Studies at the University of East London, UK, and Leverhulme Major Research Fellow (2022–2025). She is the author of Gendering the Memory of Work and Women, Education and the Self, and the co-author of The Archive Project.

"For those who have been reading Maria Tamboukou’s books work over the years, this book is a denouement of sorts. For those not yet familiar with the pleasures of reading Tamboukou, a distinctive pleasure awaits. Everything comes together via Tambakou’s ‘epistolary poethics’, which put an Arendtian agonism of love into conversation with the private and political writings of four revolutionary women: Désirée Véret-Gay, Rosa Luxemburg, Emma Goldman and Rose Pesotta. Agonism is also in the archive, with Tamboukou’s focus on women whose love letters code private and public. And readers are in the archive with Tamboukou, searching for the shards of revolutionary women’s writing, dispersed into the archives of men made more famous, or reading Emma Goldman’s papers, aware of their pending move under precarious conditions from the reduced shelter of a neo-liberalizing university to a community center. The pain of loss, thrill of discovery, and responsibility of care are braided together as Tamboukou wondrously guides her readers through the epistolarium, its history, and its politics. A must-read for scholars or fans of women's and labour history, feminism, anarchism, or Hannah Arendt."

- Bonnie Honig, Nancy Duke Lewis Professor, Brown University, USA

 

 

"The lives of four ‘revolutionary women’ read through Hannah Arendt’s thinking and writing about love: Tamboukou offers us a compelling theoretical narrative on the fascinating entanglements between love and politics. This book convincingly – and joyously - argues that love is a crucial epistemological tool for feminist theory and a vital force for feminist practice."

- Olivia Guaraldo, Professor in Political Philosophy and Director of the Hannah Arendt Center for Political Studies, University of Verona, Italy

 

"In an important contribution to feminist love studies, Tamboukou offers a highly original synthesis of materialist thought on private life. Beginning with a relational concept of the self and building upon the notion of love as a potential source of power for women, in her analysis of love letters by four notable feminist socialists, Tamboukou succeeds in ‘realigning’ emotional attachments, effectively closing the gap between the personal and the political."

-Femmes Auteurs Anglo-AMéricaines [FAAAM], Paris Nanterre University