The philosopher Sylviane Agacinski elected to the French Academy

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Sylviane Agacinski, March 8, 2012, in Reims.

It increases the number of women members of the institution to seven. The philosopher Sylviane Agacinski was elected on Thursday 1er June at the French Academy. The author of Gender policy garnered 13 votes out of 23 voters in the first round, the Academy announced. The historian Bertrand Lançon received one, while nine academicians voted blank or registered a cross.

Sylviane Agacinski, 78, has produced a prolific work on sexual alterity, claiming to be a “new feminism”. But she caused controversy in her political family, the left, by her positions hostile to medically assisted procreation (PMA) for all women and to surrogacy (GPA).

Former companion of the philosopher Jacques Derrida, with whom she had a son in 1984 whom she raised alone, she married the future socialist presidential candidate and Prime Minister Lionel Jospin in 1994.

Four vacant seats

His latest attempt, Faced with a holy war (2022), is a response to those who have accused her of being an Islamophobe, an accusation, according to her, that is regularly brandished “to hide Islamist proselytism”.

The election puts an end to a series of three missed shots to award chair 19, previously occupied by the writer Jean-Loup Dabadie, but also Boileau, Chateaubriand or René Clair. The journalists Franz-Olivier Giesbert and Olivier Barrot, and the writers Benoît Duteurtre, Frédéric Beigbeder and Eric Neuhoff had been rejected.

Of the 40 chairs of the French Academy, there are now four vacant. Another election is scheduled for June 22, in chair 6, with candidates like the philosopher specializing in Islam Christian Jambet or the oncologist David Khayat.

Read also this column by Sylviane Agacinski: Article reserved for our subscribers “Let’s refuse the trade in bellies!” »

The World with AFP

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