M.C. Behrent - Accidents happen: François Ewald, the “antirevolutionary” Foucault, and the intellectual politics of the French Welfare State
In January 2006, Jérôme Monod, a close advisor to then President Jacques Chirac, bestowed France’s highest award, the Légion d’Honneur, on François Ewald, a prominent French intellectual. Monod’s praise only barely concealed how unlikely it was, given their respective careers, that such an occasion would bring them together. A successful businessman, Monod had established himself as a counselor to France’s political elite. Ewald’s career had followed, to put it mildly, a somewhat different trajectory. After studying philosophy, he threw himself into the revolutionary politics that crystallized around the student and worker strikes of May 1968. Through his activism, he met the philosopher Michel Foucault, whose studies of madness and deviance appealed to the contrarian sensibilities of the sixties generation.