One of the world's leading radical philosophers analyses the failure
of the Syriza experience in Greece
Over the last six years, Greece has provided the world with "an open-air
political lesson." The country's deep economic and social crisis has
exposed the fundamental contradictions of the European Union, and indeed
the capitalist world as a whole. It has been a test case for movements
seeking to put an end to the authoritarian anarchy of neoliberal
capitalism. The Greek resistance to EU institutions and financial-market
hegemony offered a beacon of hope. Yet the "movementist" politics of
2011 could not build anything lasting, and Syriza's efforts as a party
of government soon led to impasse. For Alain Badiou, it is not enough to
mourn this defeat--we must understand why such a vigorous opposition
could fail.
Greece and the Reinvention of Politics argues that an opposition of
real consequence must revive the "communist hypothesis," the vision of
an alternative state structure. The "orienting maxims" that this
hypothesis provides light the way for effective political action.
Written in the storm of the crisis, the interventions collected in this
book offer a path out of our contemporary powerlessness.