The Philosophical Militant: Alain Badiou's Logical Revolts
By (Author) Dr Andrey Gordienko
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
16th October 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Philosophy: metaphysics and ontology
Critical theory
Hardback
272
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Approaching Alain Badiou as a militant thinker committed to diagnosing political disorders of his time and waging theoretical battles to advance the communist hypothesis, this book focuses on the principal ambiguity of Badious project, which concerns the enigmatic relationship between philosophy and politics. On the one hand, his mature texts maintain a strict line of separation between the two disciplines. On the other hand, Badiou consistently links the philosophical pursuit of true life to a political revolt against injustice and inequality.
Rather than treating Badiou as a builder of grand ontological systems, this book approaches the French philosopher as a combative polemicist and thinker of the contemporary moment. Not only does it take into account the development of Badious thinking from Sartre, Althusser, and Lacan as well as the yet unexplored relationship between Badious thinking and that of Foucault, but beyond that, places him in dialogue with contemporary thinkers such as Nancy Fraser and Wendy Brown.
The Philosopher Militant not only diagnoses the political malady of the epoch, but also proposes a course of treatment and actively intervenes in the current situation. Seeking to foreground the actuality of Badious work, Gordienko provides commentary on the philosophers canonical texts, exploring the relevance of his ideas to the latest political developments such as the election of Trump, as well as the dream of the lockdown during the COVID-19 pandemic. As such, this book aspires to thinking with Badiou.
Andrey Gordienko holds a PhD in Cinema Studies from University of California, Los Angeles, USA where he has taught a seminar on contemporary film theory. His work has been published in SubStance, Paragraph, Continental Philosophy Review, and Sartre Studies International.