Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Nights of Labor

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Language
  
French

Media type
  
Print

Originally published
  
1981

ISBN
  
1844677788

Publication date
  
1981

Pages
  
448 pp

Author
  
Jacques Rancière

Nights of Labor t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcSXMJIlBYs114KcE

Publisher
  
Fayard (first release), Verso (third release)

Jacques Rancière books
  
On the Shores of Politics, The Philosopher and His P, The ignorant schoolmaster, The names of history, The Emancipated Spectator

Nights of Labor: The Workers Dream in Nineteenth Century France (La Nuit des prolétaires: Archives du rêve ouvrier) is a 1981 non-fiction book by Jacques Rancière, which was based upon his doctoral thesis. The book was re-released in 2012 by Verso under the title Proletarian Nights.

Contents

Synopsis

The book collects a series of paraphrasing, quotations and summaries of worker writings that discuss a series of three experiments in worker association in mid-19th-century Paris. In the book Rancière looks at the beginnings of today's socialism and early proletarian class consciousness.

Reception

Labour/Le Travail praised the book, calling it "an important statement". The American Historical Review wrote that the translation of the book was "excellent" and thought the foreword by Donald Reid was a highlight. The Oral History Review stated that Nights of Labor was "a powerful, piercing, and radical argument". The Journal of Modern History stated the book was "more a work of philosophical meditation than conventional historical analysis." Spiked Magazine praised Rancière for not taking a "hero-centric view of history" but stated that the book was "a very dense text as Rancière, seemingly unwilling to interpret or even distil the great wealth of evidence he has uncovered, gives us it all".

References

Nights of Labor Wikipedia