Difference between revisions of "Judith Miller"
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− | '''Judith Miller''' (born [[1941]]) is a [[ | + | '''Judith Miller''' (born [[{{Jacques Lacan:Biography#1921|1941]]) is a [[French]] [[philosopher]], and the daughter of [[Jacques Lacan]] — radical [[psychoanalyst]], and wife to prominent Lacanian [[Jacques-Alain Miller]]. |
As a Maoist philosophy lecturer at Vincennes in Paris, her radicalism caused the official disaffiliation of the philosophy department, after she handed out course credit to someone she met on a bus, and subsequently publicly declared in a radio interview that the university is a capitalist institution, and that she would do everything she could to make it run as badly as possible. After this she was demoted by the French education department to a lycée teacher. | As a Maoist philosophy lecturer at Vincennes in Paris, her radicalism caused the official disaffiliation of the philosophy department, after she handed out course credit to someone she met on a bus, and subsequently publicly declared in a radio interview that the university is a capitalist institution, and that she would do everything she could to make it run as badly as possible. After this she was demoted by the French education department to a lycée teacher. | ||
[[Category:People]] | [[Category:People]] |
Revision as of 08:33, 27 October 2006
Judith Miller (born [[{{Jacques Lacan:Biography#1921|1941]]) is a French philosopher, and the daughter of Jacques Lacan — radical psychoanalyst, and wife to prominent Lacanian Jacques-Alain Miller.
As a Maoist philosophy lecturer at Vincennes in Paris, her radicalism caused the official disaffiliation of the philosophy department, after she handed out course credit to someone she met on a bus, and subsequently publicly declared in a radio interview that the university is a capitalist institution, and that she would do everything she could to make it run as badly as possible. After this she was demoted by the French education department to a lycée teacher.