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A virtuosic memoir of sexual awakening and of childhood within a French working class that now seems to have deserted the left. W hat has happened to the left? Popular attachment to social democracy is seemingly in retreat almost everywhere. In this brilliant little book, Eribon attempts to explain why, using his own experience as illustration.
It is a memoir of his upbringing as a working-class boy in a family that lived in provincial public-housing estates, where everyone left school as soon as possible and worked in factory or cleaning jobs.
Yet somehow Eribon acquired a taste for philosophy ; he moved to Paris and discovered life as a liberated gay man, and eventually became a respected professor of sociology. But as his mother suddenly opens up to him about her own past, he embarks on a process of reckoning and understanding. The laws governing the two processes are tightly intertwined. The question that really drives Eribon towards the latter stages of the book is: how did people like his own family, who used to vote communist when he was a child, end up voting in such large numbers for the far right?
It was a form of protest, and not a political project inspired by a global perspective. And what took its place was the cynical exploitation and fomenting of anti-immigrant attitudes by the far right, which brought the working class back together but this time under a mood of hostile nativism rather than economic solidarity.
This book is also a touching memoir of sexual awakening, and a gallery of philosophical ideas and characters, as Eribon explains with passion what inspired him as a teenager about the writings of Jean-Paul Sartre , and later those of Pierre Bourdieu and Michel Foucault.