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Disorderly Families

Infamous Letters from the Bastille Archives

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1 of 1 copy available

The first English translation of letters of arrest from eighteenth century France held in the archives of the Bastille
Drunken and debauched husbands; libertine wives; vagabonding children. These and many more are the subjects of requests for confinement written to the king of France in the eighteenth century. These letters of arrest (lettres de cachet) from France's Ancien Régime were often associated with excessive royal power and seen as a way for the king to imprison political opponents. In Disorderly Families, first published in French in 1982, Arlette Farge and Michel Foucault collect ninety-four letters from ordinary families who, with the help of hired scribes, submitted complaints to the king to intervene and resolve their family disputes.

Gathered together, these letters show something other than the exercise of arbitrary royal power, and offer unusual insight into the infamies of daily life. From these letters come stories of divorce and marital conflict, sexual waywardness, reckless extravagance, and abandonment. The letters evoke a fluid social space in which life in the home and on the street was regulated by the rhythms of relations between husbands and wives, or parents and children. Most impressively, these letters outline how ordinary people seized the mechanisms of power to address the king and make demands in the name of an emerging civil order.

Arlette Farge and Michel Foucault were fascinated by the letters' explosive qualities and by how they both illustrated and intervened in the workings of power and governmentality. Disorderly Families sheds light on Foucault's conception of political agency and his commitment to theorizing how ordinary lives come to be touched by power. This first English translation is complete with an introduction from the book's editor, Nancy Luxon, as well as notes that contextualize the original 1982 publication and eighteenth-century policing practices.

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    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2016
      The first English translation of letters from the Bastille archives reveals a compelling array of domestic difficulties in French families across the board.Much is known about the conditions in which both bourgeois and working-class Parisians lived in the moments leading up to the revolution in 1789. We know about the state of politics, and we have some idea of how daily life ran its course. However, we know little about the intricacies of domestic life. This collection of 94 letters, first published in French in 1982, reveals many of those details. In her introduction to these letter troves, which helps provide context for this English version, Luxon (Political Science/Univ. of Minnesota; Crisis of Authority: Politics, Trust, and Truth-Telling in Freud and Foucault, 2013, etc.) explains that in discussing the book's original iteration, Foucault considered the letters "a model of writing, or a game, created by the staging of a plea and then guttural cry--a game between the public audience and the eruption of a sort of spontaneity...'flash existences' or 'poem-lives.' " In fact, what Foucault and Farge (Director of Research, Modern History/Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique; The Allure of the Archives, 2015, etc.) have assembled is a kind of catalog of lives that explores the various facets of interpersonal relationships through short, haiku-esque linguistic glimpses. The letters as presented--and translated by Scott-Railton--explore the various points of view that make up family settings: spousal relations, parents and children, and royal submission. "The family secret became an object to appropriate; thus, spreading the secret...all the way to the king, was a manner of retrieving honor," explains Foucault. An enlightening compilation that will leave historically inclined readers wanting to dig a little further into the archives.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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