ABSTRACT

Althusser and Law is the first book specifically dedicated to the place of law in Louis Althusser’s philosophy. The growing importance of Althusser’s philosophy in contemporary debates on the left has - for practical and political, as well theoretical reasons - made a sustained consideration of his conception of law more necessary than ever. As a form of what Althusser called ‘Ideological State Apparatuses’, law is at the forefront of political struggles: from the destruction of Labour Law to the exploitation of Patent Law; from the privatisation of Public Law to the ongoing hegemony of Commercial Law; and from the discourse on Human Rights to the practice of judicial courts. Is Althusser still useful in helping us to understand these struggles? Does he have something to teach us about how law is produced, and how it is used and misused? This collection demonstrates that Althusser’s ideas about law are more important, and more contemporary, than ever. Indeed, the contributors to Althusser and Law argue that Althusser offers a new and invaluable perspective on the place of law in contemporary life.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction1

chapter |18 pages

Chapter 1 The threat of the outside

Althusser's reflections on law

chapter |18 pages

Chapter 3 Monarchy, despotism and Althusser's ‘linguistic trick'

William Robertson and the literary reproduction of Montesquieu's concept of ‘fundamental law'

chapter |14 pages

Chapter 5 Prohibitionary law as apparatus of subjectivation

Butler's Psychic Life of Power and Althusser

chapter |16 pages

Chapter 6 Althusser in Avatar

Comparative law as a science and the haunting of the subject*

chapter |11 pages

Chapter 7 Rereading Capital

Notes towards an investigation of law, politics and pensions

chapter |17 pages

Chapter 8 The Althusser fact

For madness creates no right — on the secularization of law