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André Gorz

André Gorz (French: [ɑ̃dʁe ɡɔʁts];  Gerhart Hirsch, German: [ˈɡeːɐ̯haʁt ˈhɪʁʃ]; 9 February 1923 – 22 September 2007), more commonly known by his pen names Gérard Horst (pronounced [ʒeʁaʁ ɔʁst]) and Michel Bosquet (pronounced [miʃɛl bɔskɛ]), was an Austrian and French social philosopher and journalist and critic of work.[1][2][3] He co-founded Le Nouvel Observateur weekly in 1964. A supporter of Jean-Paul Sartre's existentialist version of Marxism after the Second World War, he became in the aftermath of the May '68 student riots more concerned with political ecology.[4]

André Gorz
Gorz (to the right) and his wife, Dorine
Born
Gerhart Hirsch

9 February 1923
Died22 September 2007(2007-09-22) (aged 84)
Vosnon, France
Other namesGérard Horst, Michel Bosquet
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy

In the 1960s and 1970s, he was a main theorist in the New Left movement and coined the concept of non-reformist reform.[4] His central theme was wage labour issues such as liberation from work, the just distribution of work, social alienation, and a guaranteed basic income.[5]

Early life Edit

Born in Vienna as Gerhart Hirsch, he was the son of a Jewish wood-salesman and a Catholic mother, who came from a cultivated background and worked as a secretary. Although his parents did not have any strong sense of national or religious identity, the rising anti-Semitism led his father to convert to Catholicism in 1930. At the outbreak of World War II in 1939, his mother sent him to an institution in Switzerland to avoid his mobilization into the Wehrmacht. Thereafter, Hirsch was a stateless person until 12 April 1957,[6] when he became naturalized as French citizen because of Pierre Mendès-France's support.[7] He graduated from the École polytechnique at University of Lausanne, now EPFL, in chemical engineering in 1945.

Working at first as a translator of American short stories published by a Swiss editor, he then published his first articles in a co-operative journal. In 1946, he met Jean-Paul Sartre, and they became close. Gorz was then influenced mainly by existentialism and phenomenology. He contributed to the journals Les Temps modernes (Paris), New Left Review, Technologie und Politik (Reinbek).[2] In June 1949, he moved to Paris, where he worked first at the international secretariat of the Mouvement des Citoyens du Monde [fr], then as private secretary of a military attaché of the embassy of India. He then entered Paris-Presse as a journalist and took the pseudonym of Michel Bosquet. There, he met with Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber, who in 1955 recruited him as an economist journalist for L'Express.

Alongside his journalistic activities, Gorz worked closely with Sartre and adopted an existentialist approach to Marxism, which led Gorz to emphasize the questions of alienation and of liberation in the framework of existential experience and an analysis of social systems from the viewpoint of individual experience. That intellectual framework formed the basis of his first books, Le Traître (Le Seuil, 1958, prefaced by Sartre[8]), La Morale de l'histoire (Le Seuil, 1959) and the Fondements pour une morale (Galilée, 1977, published fifteen years later), which he signed for the first time as André Gorz, from the German name of the now-Italian city (Görz), where the eyeglasses that were given to his father by the Austrian Army had been made.

1960s–1980s Edit

Gorz also was a main theorist in the New Left movement, inspired by the young Marx, discussions of humanism and alienation and the liberation of humanity. Gorz was also influenced by the Frankfurt School since he was a friend of Herbert Marcuse. Other friends of his included Rossana Rossanda, founder of Il Manifesto newspaper, the photographer William Klein, younger intellectuals such as Marc Kravetz or Tiennot Grumbach,[7] and Ronald Fraser of the New Left Review.

He strongly criticised structuralism because of its criticisms of the subject and of subjectivity. He called himself a "revolutionary-reformist", a democratic socialist who wanted to see system-changing reforms. In 1961, he entered the editorial committee of Les Temps Modernes and introduced to French thought the Italian Garavini, the neo-Keynesian and communist Bruno Trentin and the anarcho-syndicalist Vittorio Foa.[9] Imposing himself as the "intellectual leader of the 'Italian' tendency of the New Left",[10]) he influenced activists of the UNEF students' union and the CFDT (in particular, Jean Auger, Michel Rolant and Fredo Krumnow) as a theorist of workers' self-management, which has been recently embraced by the CFDT.[citation needed] His term "non-reformist reform" refers to proposed programs of change that base their demands on human needs, rather than those of the current economic system.[11]

He directly addressed himself to trade unions in Stratégie ouvrière et néocapitalisme (Le Seuil, 1964) in which he criticized capitalist economic growth and expounded on the various strategies open to trade unions. The same year, he quit L'Express, along with Serge Lafaurie, Jacques-Laurent Bost, K.S. Karol and Jean Daniel, to found Le Nouvel Observateur weekly and used the pseudonym Michel Bosquet.

Deeply affected by May 1968, Gorz saw in the events a confirmation of his existential Marxist posture, which joined the students' criticisms towards institutional and state organisations: state, school, family, firm etc. Ivan Illich's ideas on education, medicine and the abolition of wage labour then became the focus of his attention. Gorz published one of Illich's speeches in Les Temps Modernes in 1961 and met him in 1971 in Le Nouvel Observateur at the publishing of Deschooling Society (Une Société sans école). Gorz later published a summary of Illich's Tools for Conviviality (1973) under the title Libérer l'avenir (Free Future). His links with Illich was strengthened after a trip to California in 1974, and he wrote several articles for Le Nouvel Observateur to discuss Illich's thesis.[12]

Gorz's evolution and political and philosophical stances led to some tensions with his colleagues on Les Temps Modernes for which he had assumed the chief editorial responsibilities in 1969. In April 1970, his article Destroy the University (Détruire l'Université) provoked the resignations of Jean-Bertrand Pontalis and Bernard Pingaud. Gorz also criticised a Maoist tendency that had been in the journal since 1971 and supported by Sartre. In 1974, Gorz finally resigned as editor after a disagreement on an article about the Italian autonomist group Lotta Continua. He was also forced to the periphery of Le Nouvel Observateur since he was replaced by more classically oriented economists, and he supported a campaign against nuclear industry to which EDF, the state electricity firm, replied by withdrawing advertisements from the weekly. After it refused to let him publish a special issue on the nuclear issue, he published it in the Que Choisir? consumers' magazine.

Gorz was becoming a leading figure of political ecology, with his ideas being popularised particularly by the ecologist monthly Le Sauvage, which had been founded by Alain Hervé, the founder of the French section of the Friends of the Earth. In 1975, Gorz published Ecologie et politique (Galilée, 1975), which included the essay Ecologie et liberté, "one of the foundational texts of the ecologic problematic".[13]

Gorz was also influenced by Louis Dumont in considering Marxism and liberalism to be two versions of economist thought. Gorz then opposed hedonist individualism and utilitarianism and materialist and productivist collectivism. He supported a humanist version of ecology similar to social ecology that opposes deep ecology. Gorz's ecologism, however, remained linked to a critique of capitalism, as he called for an "ecological, social and cultural revolution that abolishes the constraints of capitalism".[14]

1980s–2000s Edit

A year before the election of the left's candidate, François Mitterrand, to the French presidency in 1981, Gorz published Adieux au prolétariat (Galilée, 1980 – "Farewell to the Proletariat") in which he criticized the cult of the proletarian class in Marxism. He argued that changes in science and technology had made it impossible for the working class to be the sole or even the main revolutionary agent. Although the book was not well received among the French left, it received attention from younger readers.

Soon after Sartre's death that year, Gorz left the editorial board of Les Temps Modernes. In Les Chemins du paradis (Galilée, 1983) Gorz remained critical of the Marxist orthodoxy of the time, and he used Marx's own analysis in the Grundrisse to argue for the need of the political left to embrace the liberatory potential that the increasing automation of factories and services offered as a central part of the socialist project. In 1983, he fell out with pacifist movements by refusing to oppose the deployment of Pershing II missiles by the United States in West Germany. The same year, he resigned from Le Nouvel Observateur.

In the 1990s and the 2000s, the journals Multitudes and EcoRev' published his last article in French, La fin du capitalisme a déjà commencé ("The End of Capitalism Has Already Begun"),[15] and Entropia published his articles.

Gorz also opposed the post-structuralism and the postmodernism of thinkers like Antonio Negri. Gorz's point of view was rooted in the thought of early Marxist humanism. Liberation from wage slavery and social alienation remained some of his goals, even in his later works.[16]

He never became an abstract theorist since his reasoning usually concluded with proposals for how to act to make changes. In Métamorphoses du travail (Galilée, 1988 – "Metamorphosis of Labour"), Gorz argued that capitalism used personal investments from the worker that were not paid back. As such, he became an advocate of a guaranteed basic income independent from work. He made such a proposal in his book, Critique of Economic Reason in 1989 and argued:

"From the point where it takes only 1,000 hours per year or 20,000 to 30,000 hours per lifetime to create an amount of wealth equal to or greater than the amount we create at the present time in 1,600 hours per year or 40,000 to 50,000 hours in a working life, we must all be able to obtain a real income equal to or higher than our current salaries in exchange for a greatly reduced quantity of work. In practice, this means that in the future we must receive our full monthly income every month even if we work full-time only one month in every two or six months in a year or even two years out of four, so as to complete a personal, family or community project, or experiment with different lifestyles, just as we now receive our full salaries during paid holidays, training courses, possibly during periods of sabbatical leave, and so forth...".[17]

He pointed out that in

"contrast to the guaranteed social minimum granted by the state to those unable to find regular paid work, our regular monthly income will be the normal remuneration we have earned by performing the normal amount of labour the economy requires each individual to supply. The fact that the amount of labour required is so low that work can become intermittent and constitute an activity amongst a number of others, should not be an obstacle to its being remunerated by a full monthly income throughout one's life. This income corresponds to the portion of socially produced wealth to which each individual is entitled by virtue to their participation in the social process of production. It is, however, no longer a true salary, since it is not dependent on the amount of labour supplied (in the month or year) and is not intended to remunerate individuals as workers".[18]

Death Edit

Gorz and his wife, Dorine, committed suicide by lethal injection together in their home in Vosnon, Aube. His wife had been diagnosed with a terminal illness, and they had already said that neither wanted to survive the other's death.[4] Their bodies were found on 24 September 2007 by a friend.[8][19]

His book Lettre à D. Histoire d'un amour (Galilée, 2006) was dedicated to his wife and was in fact a way for him to tell of his love for her.[4]

Bibliography Edit

Books Edit

  • La morale de l'histoire (Seuil, 1959)
  • Stratégie ouvrière et néocapitalisme (Seuil, 1964)
  • Socialism and Revolution (first published, Seuil, 1967, as Le socialisme difficile)
  • Réforme et révolution (Seuil, 1969)
  • Critique du capitalisme quotidien (Galilée, 1973)
  • Critique de la division du travail (Seuil, 1973. Collective work)
  • Ecology as Politics (South End Press, 1979, first published, Galilée, 1978)
  • Écologie et liberté (Galilée, 1977)
  • Fondements pour une morale (Galilée, 1977)
  • The Traitor (1960, first published, Seuil, 1958)
  • Farewell to the Working Class (1980 – Galilée, 1980, and Le Seuil, 1981, as Adieux au Prolétariat)
  • Paths to Paradise (1985 – Galilée, 1983)
  • Critique of Economic Reason (Verso, 1989, first published, Galilée, 1988, as Métamorphoses du travail, quête du sens)
  • Capitalism, Socialism, Ecology (1994 – Galilée, 1991)
  • Reclaiming Work: Beyond the Wage-Based Society (1999, first published, Galilée 1997 as Misères du présent, richesse du possible)
  • The Immaterial: Knowledge, Value and Capital (Seagull Books, 2010, first published, Galilée, 2003)
  • Letter to D : A Love Letter (Polity, 2009, first published 2006 – extract on-line 14 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine)
  • Ecologica (Galilée, 2008)
  • Le fil rouge de l'écologie. Entretiens inédits en français, Willy Gianinazzi (ed.) (Ed. de l'EHESS, 2015)
  • Leur écologie et la nôtre. Anthologie d'écologie politique, Françoise Gollain & Willy Gianinazzi (eds.) (Seuil, 2020)

Essays Edit

  • Willy Gianinazzi, André Gorz: A life, London: Seagull Books, 2022.
  • Finn Bowring, André Gorz and the Sartrean Legacy: Arguments for a person-centred social theory, London: MacMillan, 2000.
  • Conrad Lodziak, Jeremy Tatman, André Gorz: A critical introduction, London: Pluto Press, 1997.
  • The Social Ideology of the Motorcar, Le Sauvage September–October 1973

Audio Edit

  • An hommage to the thought of André Gorz broadcast on France Culture:
  • A portrait of André Gorz was broadcast on France Culture on 20 December 2006, on the radio show Surpris par la nuit.

Interviews Edit

  • Interview with Andre Gorz (video in German), 3sat, 5 September 2007
  • Interview with Gorz 1983-Farewell to the Proletariat (text in English)
  • Entrevistas a Andre Gorz : Clarín y Michel Zlotowski, 1999. Traducción de Cristina Sardoy (in Spanish) – Les périphériques vous parlent, printemps 1998 (in French)

Documentary Edit

  • Charline Guillaume, Victor Tortora, Julien Tortora and Pierre-Jean Perrin, Letter to G., Rethinking our society with André Gorz,[20][21] autoproduction.

References Edit

  1. ^ "Andre Gorz — RIP | MR Online". mronline.org. 26 September 2007. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  2. ^ a b "Verso". www.versobooks.com. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  3. ^ "Questioning the Centrality of Work with André Gorz". Green European Journal. Retrieved 3 April 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d "André Gorz's Non-Reformist Reforms Show How We Can Transform the World Today". jacobinmag.com. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  5. ^ André Gorz, Pour un revenu inconditionnel suffisant 26 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine, published in TRANSVERSALES/SCIENCE-CULTURE (n° 3, 3e trimestre 2002) (in French)
  6. ^ Willy Gianinazzi, André Gorz. Une vie, La Découverte, 2016, p. 69.
  7. ^ a b Michel Contat, André Gorz, le philosophe et sa femme, Le Monde des livres, 26 October 2006, mirrored by Multitudes (in French)
  8. ^ a b Le philosophe André Gorz et sa femme se sont suicidés, Le Figaro, 25 September 2007 (in French)
  9. ^ On the relationship between Bruno Trentin and André Gorz, see W. Gianinazzi, op. cit.
  10. ^ Michel Contat, « Illustres inconnus et inconnus illustres : André Gorz », in Le Débat, n° 50, p. 243.
  11. ^ Julian Bond; Leah Wise; Henry Durham; Howard Romaine; Robert Sherrill; Derek Shearer (30 January 2013). Military and the South. p. 39.
  12. ^ Thierry Paquot, The Non-Conformist, Le Monde diplomatique, January 2003 (in English) (French version freely-available, and Portuguese and Esperanto translations available)
  13. ^ Françoise Gollain, Pensée écologique et critique du travail dans une perspective gorzienne, Orléans, Ph.D. en economic sciences, 1999, p. 113
  14. ^ French: « révolution écologique, sociale et culturelle qui abolisse les contraintes du capitalisme», quoted by Françoise Gollain, op. cit., p. 13
  15. ^ "Le travail dans la sortie du capitalisme - Revue Critique d'Ecologie Politique". ecorev.org.
  16. ^ Räterlinck, Lennart E. H. (2011). "Review of Arbetssamhället: Hur arbetet överlevde teknologin". Sociologisk Forskning. 48 (1): 68–70. ISSN 0038-0342. JSTOR 41203052.
  17. ^ Gorz, André (1989). Critic of Economic Reason. London - New-York: Verso. p. 240. ISBN 978-1-84467-667-5.
  18. ^ Gorz, André (1989). Critique of Economic Reason. London - New-York: Verso. p. 241. ISBN 978-1-84467-667-5.
  19. ^ AFP, "French philosopher commits suicide with wife," 25 September 2007 on-line 3 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine (in English)
  20. ^ "" Il faut vouloir autre chose, mais quoi ? " : avoir 20 ans et écrire à André Gorz". L'Obs (in French). 27 September 2019. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  21. ^ "Letter to G., the film - Rethinking our society with André Gorz". Letter to G. Retrieved 4 September 2020.

External links Edit

  • Appendix to Critique of Economic Reason: Summary for Trade Union and Other Left Activists
  • Reform and Revolution, Socialist Register, 1968
  • « Oser l'exode » de la société de travail dans Les périphériques vous parlent n° 10, printemps 1998, pp. 43–49 (in French)
  • Chris Turner, André Gorz French philosopher who pioneered ideas of political ecology, The Guardian, 7 November 2007
  • Andre Gorz – RIP, Monthly Review
  • Social theorist André Gorz dies, aged 84, World Socialist
  • Page dedicated to André Gorz on Multitudes
  • « L'immatériel » d'André Gorz, by Yann Moulier-Boutang, EcoRev', 2003 (in French)
  • Extract of an article published in March 1974 in Les Temps Modernes (in French)
  • in the journal Streifzüge (in German)
  • Articles in the journal EcoRev' (in French)
  • Blog entry concerning the death of Andre Gorz and his wife (in German)
  • Finn Bowring, "The Writer's Malady: André Gorz, 1923–2007" Obituary published in Radical Philosophy (March/April 2008)
  • El suicidio de André Gorz y su mujer ( 2009-10-25) (Spanish) artículo del escritor colombiano Germán Uribe [es]
  • in Mil neuf cent, 2008 (in French)
  • Thinking after capitalism with André Gorz in EcoRev', autumn 2009
  • Kurzarbeit, "living-dead capitalism," and the future of the left article summarizing Gorz's Paths to Paradise

andré, gorz, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, ci. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Andre Gorz news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations September 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Andre Gorz French ɑ dʁe ɡɔʁts ne Gerhart Hirsch German ˈɡeːɐ haʁt ˈhɪʁʃ 9 February 1923 22 September 2007 more commonly known by his pen names Gerard Horst pronounced ʒeʁaʁ ɔʁst and Michel Bosquet pronounced miʃɛl bɔskɛ was an Austrian and French social philosopher and journalist and critic of work 1 2 3 He co founded Le Nouvel Observateur weekly in 1964 A supporter of Jean Paul Sartre s existentialist version of Marxism after the Second World War he became in the aftermath of the May 68 student riots more concerned with political ecology 4 Andre GorzGorz to the right and his wife DorineBornGerhart Hirsch9 February 1923Vienna AustriaDied22 September 2007 2007 09 22 aged 84 Vosnon FranceOther namesGerard Horst Michel BosquetEra20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophyIn the 1960s and 1970s he was a main theorist in the New Left movement and coined the concept of non reformist reform 4 His central theme was wage labour issues such as liberation from work the just distribution of work social alienation and a guaranteed basic income 5 Contents 1 Early life 2 1960s 1980s 3 1980s 2000s 4 Death 5 Bibliography 5 1 Books 5 2 Essays 5 3 Audio 5 4 Interviews 5 5 Documentary 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditBorn in Vienna as Gerhart Hirsch he was the son of a Jewish wood salesman and a Catholic mother who came from a cultivated background and worked as a secretary Although his parents did not have any strong sense of national or religious identity the rising anti Semitism led his father to convert to Catholicism in 1930 At the outbreak of World War II in 1939 his mother sent him to an institution in Switzerland to avoid his mobilization into the Wehrmacht Thereafter Hirsch was a stateless person until 12 April 1957 6 when he became naturalized as French citizen because of Pierre Mendes France s support 7 He graduated from the Ecole polytechnique at University of Lausanne now EPFL in chemical engineering in 1945 Working at first as a translator of American short stories published by a Swiss editor he then published his first articles in a co operative journal In 1946 he met Jean Paul Sartre and they became close Gorz was then influenced mainly by existentialism and phenomenology He contributed to the journals Les Temps modernes Paris New Left Review Technologie und Politik Reinbek 2 In June 1949 he moved to Paris where he worked first at the international secretariat of the Mouvement des Citoyens du Monde fr then as private secretary of a military attache of the embassy of India He then entered Paris Presse as a journalist and took the pseudonym of Michel Bosquet There he met with Jean Jacques Servan Schreiber who in 1955 recruited him as an economist journalist for L Express Alongside his journalistic activities Gorz worked closely with Sartre and adopted an existentialist approach to Marxism which led Gorz to emphasize the questions of alienation and of liberation in the framework of existential experience and an analysis of social systems from the viewpoint of individual experience That intellectual framework formed the basis of his first books Le Traitre Le Seuil 1958 prefaced by Sartre 8 La Morale de l histoire Le Seuil 1959 and the Fondements pour une morale Galilee 1977 published fifteen years later which he signed for the first time as Andre Gorz from the German name of the now Italian city Gorz where the eyeglasses that were given to his father by the Austrian Army had been made 1960s 1980s EditGorz also was a main theorist in the New Left movement inspired by the young Marx discussions of humanism and alienation and the liberation of humanity Gorz was also influenced by the Frankfurt School since he was a friend of Herbert Marcuse Other friends of his included Rossana Rossanda founder of Il Manifesto newspaper the photographer William Klein younger intellectuals such as Marc Kravetz or Tiennot Grumbach 7 and Ronald Fraser of the New Left Review He strongly criticised structuralism because of its criticisms of the subject and of subjectivity He called himself a revolutionary reformist a democratic socialist who wanted to see system changing reforms In 1961 he entered the editorial committee of Les Temps Modernes and introduced to French thought the Italian Garavini the neo Keynesian and communist Bruno Trentin and the anarcho syndicalist Vittorio Foa 9 Imposing himself as the intellectual leader of the Italian tendency of the New Left 10 he influenced activists of the UNEF students union and the CFDT in particular Jean Auger Michel Rolant and Fredo Krumnow as a theorist of workers self management which has been recently embraced by the CFDT citation needed His term non reformist reform refers to proposed programs of change that base their demands on human needs rather than those of the current economic system 11 He directly addressed himself to trade unions in Strategie ouvriere et neocapitalisme Le Seuil 1964 in which he criticized capitalist economic growth and expounded on the various strategies open to trade unions The same year he quit L Express along with Serge Lafaurie Jacques Laurent Bost K S Karol and Jean Daniel to found Le Nouvel Observateur weekly and used the pseudonym Michel Bosquet Deeply affected by May 1968 Gorz saw in the events a confirmation of his existential Marxist posture which joined the students criticisms towards institutional and state organisations state school family firm etc Ivan Illich s ideas on education medicine and the abolition of wage labour then became the focus of his attention Gorz published one of Illich s speeches in Les Temps Modernes in 1961 and met him in 1971 in Le Nouvel Observateur at the publishing of Deschooling Society Une Societe sans ecole Gorz later published a summary of Illich s Tools for Conviviality 1973 under the title Liberer l avenir Free Future His links with Illich was strengthened after a trip to California in 1974 and he wrote several articles for Le Nouvel Observateur to discuss Illich s thesis 12 Gorz s evolution and political and philosophical stances led to some tensions with his colleagues on Les Temps Modernes for which he had assumed the chief editorial responsibilities in 1969 In April 1970 his article Destroy the University Detruire l Universite provoked the resignations of Jean Bertrand Pontalis and Bernard Pingaud Gorz also criticised a Maoist tendency that had been in the journal since 1971 and supported by Sartre In 1974 Gorz finally resigned as editor after a disagreement on an article about the Italian autonomist group Lotta Continua He was also forced to the periphery of Le Nouvel Observateur since he was replaced by more classically oriented economists and he supported a campaign against nuclear industry to which EDF the state electricity firm replied by withdrawing advertisements from the weekly After it refused to let him publish a special issue on the nuclear issue he published it in the Que Choisir consumers magazine Gorz was becoming a leading figure of political ecology with his ideas being popularised particularly by the ecologist monthly Le Sauvage which had been founded by Alain Herve the founder of the French section of the Friends of the Earth In 1975 Gorz published Ecologie et politique Galilee 1975 which included the essay Ecologie et liberte one of the foundational texts of the ecologic problematic 13 Gorz was also influenced by Louis Dumont in considering Marxism and liberalism to be two versions of economist thought Gorz then opposed hedonist individualism and utilitarianism and materialist and productivist collectivism He supported a humanist version of ecology similar to social ecology that opposes deep ecology Gorz s ecologism however remained linked to a critique of capitalism as he called for an ecological social and cultural revolution that abolishes the constraints of capitalism 14 1980s 2000s EditA year before the election of the left s candidate Francois Mitterrand to the French presidency in 1981 Gorz published Adieux au proletariat Galilee 1980 Farewell to the Proletariat in which he criticized the cult of the proletarian class in Marxism He argued that changes in science and technology had made it impossible for the working class to be the sole or even the main revolutionary agent Although the book was not well received among the French left it received attention from younger readers Soon after Sartre s death that year Gorz left the editorial board of Les Temps Modernes In Les Chemins du paradis Galilee 1983 Gorz remained critical of the Marxist orthodoxy of the time and he used Marx s own analysis in the Grundrisse to argue for the need of the political left to embrace the liberatory potential that the increasing automation of factories and services offered as a central part of the socialist project In 1983 he fell out with pacifist movements by refusing to oppose the deployment of Pershing II missiles by the United States in West Germany The same year he resigned from Le Nouvel Observateur In the 1990s and the 2000s the journals Multitudes and EcoRev published his last article in French La fin du capitalisme a deja commence The End of Capitalism Has Already Begun 15 and Entropia published his articles Gorz also opposed the post structuralism and the postmodernism of thinkers like Antonio Negri Gorz s point of view was rooted in the thought of early Marxist humanism Liberation from wage slavery and social alienation remained some of his goals even in his later works 16 He never became an abstract theorist since his reasoning usually concluded with proposals for how to act to make changes In Metamorphoses du travail Galilee 1988 Metamorphosis of Labour Gorz argued that capitalism used personal investments from the worker that were not paid back As such he became an advocate of a guaranteed basic income independent from work He made such a proposal in his book Critique of Economic Reason in 1989 and argued From the point where it takes only 1 000 hours per year or 20 000 to 30 000 hours per lifetime to create an amount of wealth equal to or greater than the amount we create at the present time in 1 600 hours per year or 40 000 to 50 000 hours in a working life we must all be able to obtain a real income equal to or higher than our current salaries in exchange for a greatly reduced quantity of work In practice this means that in the future we must receive our full monthly income every month even if we work full time only one month in every two or six months in a year or even two years out of four so as to complete a personal family or community project or experiment with different lifestyles just as we now receive our full salaries during paid holidays training courses possibly during periods of sabbatical leave and so forth 17 He pointed out that in contrast to the guaranteed social minimum granted by the state to those unable to find regular paid work our regular monthly income will be the normal remuneration we have earned by performing the normal amount of labour the economy requires each individual to supply The fact that the amount of labour required is so low that work can become intermittent and constitute an activity amongst a number of others should not be an obstacle to its being remunerated by a full monthly income throughout one s life This income corresponds to the portion of socially produced wealth to which each individual is entitled by virtue to their participation in the social process of production It is however no longer a true salary since it is not dependent on the amount of labour supplied in the month or year and is not intended to remunerate individuals as workers 18 Death EditGorz and his wife Dorine committed suicide by lethal injection together in their home in Vosnon Aube His wife had been diagnosed with a terminal illness and they had already said that neither wanted to survive the other s death 4 Their bodies were found on 24 September 2007 by a friend 8 19 His book Lettre a D Histoire d un amour Galilee 2006 was dedicated to his wife and was in fact a way for him to tell of his love for her 4 Bibliography EditBooks Edit La morale de l histoire Seuil 1959 Strategie ouvriere et neocapitalisme Seuil 1964 Socialism and Revolution first published Seuil 1967 as Le socialisme difficile Reforme et revolution Seuil 1969 Critique du capitalisme quotidien Galilee 1973 Critique de la division du travail Seuil 1973 Collective work Ecology as Politics South End Press 1979 first published Galilee 1978 Ecologie et liberte Galilee 1977 Fondements pour une morale Galilee 1977 The Traitor 1960 first published Seuil 1958 Farewell to the Working Class 1980 Galilee 1980 and Le Seuil 1981 as Adieux au Proletariat Paths to Paradise 1985 Galilee 1983 Critique of Economic Reason Verso 1989 first published Galilee 1988 as Metamorphoses du travail quete du sens Capitalism Socialism Ecology 1994 Galilee 1991 Reclaiming Work Beyond the Wage Based Society 1999 first published Galilee 1997 as Miseres du present richesse du possible The Immaterial Knowledge Value and Capital Seagull Books 2010 first published Galilee 2003 Letter to D A Love Letter Polity 2009 first published 2006 extract on line Archived 14 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine Ecologica Galilee 2008 Le fil rouge de l ecologie Entretiens inedits en francais Willy Gianinazzi ed Ed de l EHESS 2015 Leur ecologie et la notre Anthologie d ecologie politique Francoise Gollain amp Willy Gianinazzi eds Seuil 2020 Essays Edit Willy Gianinazzi Andre Gorz A life London Seagull Books 2022 Finn Bowring Andre Gorz and the Sartrean Legacy Arguments for a person centred social theory London MacMillan 2000 Conrad Lodziak Jeremy Tatman Andre Gorz A critical introduction London Pluto Press 1997 The Social Ideology of the Motorcar Le Sauvage September October 1973Audio Edit An hommage to the thought of Andre Gorz broadcast on France Culture Philosophie en situations Andre Gorz philosophe d avenir A portrait of Andre Gorz was broadcast on France Culture on 20 December 2006 on the radio show Surpris par la nuit Interviews Edit Interview with Andre Gorz video in German 3sat 5 September 2007 Interview with Gorz 1983 Farewell to the Proletariat text in English Entrevistas a Andre Gorz Clarin y Michel Zlotowski 1999 Traduccion de Cristina Sardoy in Spanish Les peripheriques vous parlent printemps 1998 in French Documentary Edit Charline Guillaume Victor Tortora Julien Tortora and Pierre Jean Perrin Letter to G Rethinking our society with Andre Gorz 20 21 autoproduction References Edit Andre Gorz RIP MR Online mronline org 26 September 2007 Retrieved 14 March 2022 a b Verso www versobooks com Retrieved 14 March 2022 Questioning the Centrality of Work with Andre Gorz Green European Journal Retrieved 3 April 2022 a b c d Andre Gorz s Non Reformist Reforms Show How We Can Transform the World Today jacobinmag com Retrieved 14 March 2022 Andre Gorz Pour un revenu inconditionnel suffisant Archived 26 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine published in TRANSVERSALES SCIENCE CULTURE n 3 3e trimestre 2002 in French Willy Gianinazzi Andre Gorz Une vie La Decouverte 2016 p 69 a b Michel Contat Andre Gorz le philosophe et sa femme Le Monde des livres 26 October 2006 mirrored by Multitudes in French a b Le philosophe Andre Gorz et sa femme se sont suicides Le Figaro 25 September 2007 in French On the relationship between Bruno Trentin and Andre Gorz see W Gianinazzi op cit Michel Contat Illustres inconnus et inconnus illustres Andre Gorz in Le Debat n 50 p 243 Julian Bond Leah Wise Henry Durham Howard Romaine Robert Sherrill Derek Shearer 30 January 2013 Military and the South p 39 Thierry Paquot The Non Conformist Le Monde diplomatique January 2003 in English French version freely available and Portuguese and Esperanto translations available Francoise Gollain Pensee ecologique et critique du travail dans une perspective gorzienne Orleans Ph D en economic sciences 1999 p 113 French revolution ecologique sociale et culturelle qui abolisse les contraintes du capitalisme quoted by Francoise Gollain op cit p 13 Le travail dans la sortie du capitalisme Revue Critique d Ecologie Politique ecorev org Raterlinck Lennart E H 2011 Review of Arbetssamhallet Hur arbetet overlevde teknologin Sociologisk Forskning 48 1 68 70 ISSN 0038 0342 JSTOR 41203052 Gorz Andre 1989 Critic of Economic Reason London New York Verso p 240 ISBN 978 1 84467 667 5 Gorz Andre 1989 Critique of Economic Reason London New York Verso p 241 ISBN 978 1 84467 667 5 AFP French philosopher commits suicide with wife 25 September 2007 on line Archived 3 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine in English Il faut vouloir autre chose mais quoi avoir 20 ans et ecrire a Andre Gorz L Obs in French 27 September 2019 Retrieved 4 September 2020 Letter to G the film Rethinking our society with Andre Gorz Letter to G Retrieved 4 September 2020 External links EditAppendix to Critique of Economic Reason Summary for Trade Union and Other Left Activists Reform and Revolution Socialist Register 1968 Oser l exode de la societe de travail dans Les peripheriques vous parlent n 10 printemps 1998 pp 43 49 in French Chris Turner Andre Gorz French philosopher who pioneered ideas of political ecology The Guardian 7 November 2007 Andre Gorz RIP Monthly Review Social theorist Andre Gorz dies aged 84 World Socialist Page dedicated to Andre Gorz on Multitudes L immateriel d Andre Gorz by Yann Moulier Boutang EcoRev 2003 in French Extract of an article published in March 1974 in Les Temps Modernes in French Articles in the journal Streifzuge in German Articles in the journal EcoRev in French Blog entry concerning the death of Andre Gorz and his wife in German Finn Bowring The Writer s Malady Andre Gorz 1923 2007 Obituary published in Radical Philosophy March April 2008 El suicidio de Andre Gorz y su mujer Archived 2009 10 25 Spanish articulo del escritor colombiano German Uribe es Andre Gorz and the Syndicalism in Mil neuf cent 2008 in French Thinking after capitalism with Andre Gorz in EcoRev autumn 2009 Kurzarbeit living dead capitalism and the future of the left article summarizing Gorz s Paths to Paradise Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andre Gorz amp oldid 1176544031, 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