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537 pages, Kindle Edition
First published June 1, 2003
"The wider themes of twentieth-century French philosophy reveal how the nineteenth-century faith in progress became tempered, if not close to undermined, by the tragic experience of two World Wars, and by the grim realisation that dehumanisation and authoritarianism can also follow in the wake of technological progress.
"Twentieth-century French thinkers became keenly aware of how both rationalistic and irrational styles of thought can be disfigured to undermine human dignity, even though these thinkers frequently retained enough optimism to look back upon the nineteenth century in an effort to find inspiration for social improvement and liberation from what they perceived to be increasingly oppressive authoritarian regimes and doctrines.
"With such hopes, French thinkers often cited the works of German-speaking theorists such as Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche and Sigmund Freud..."

"By locating the source of authentic and liberating thought in the unconscious, and by understanding dreams to be expressions of the same, the Surrealists aspired to integrate these unconscious energies into the social scene at large to illuminate, and also change, the standing social condition...[It signified] a resolution and blend between dream and reality into what was hoped to be a truer, more liberated, daily condition."
"By wondering about the degree to which mainstream Western society has become surrealistic, we can begin to discern the degree of artificiality, and thereby, the degree of potentiality for revolutionary reform that characterises our present [twenty-first century] cultural situation."
"The meaninglessness of the raw perceptual field was covered over, and the idea of multiple-interpretability was extended into the sphere of daily life, recalling the hermeneutic implications of God's death as the cosmic author and interpreter, and introducing an imaginary and fictive quality into the natural world at large."