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Daniel Defert
French sociologist and AIDS activist (–)
Daniel Defert (10 September – 7 February ) was a French sociologist and HIV/AIDS activist. Partner to the late Michel Foucault, Defert co-founded France's first AIDS advocacy group, AIDES, following Foucault's death from complications related to the disease.
Defert was the heir to Foucault's estate.
Early life
Daniel Defert was born on 10 September He graduated from the École normale supérieure de Saint-Cloud.
He earned the agrégation in philosophy.[1] Defert met Foucault while he was a philosophy student at the University of Clermont-Ferrand in France and their relationship lasted from until Foucault's death in [citation needed]
Early academic career
A professor of sociology, Daniel Defert was assistant (–), maître-assistant (–), then maître de conférence (from ) at the Centre Universitaire of Vincennes, which became in Université Paris VIII Vincennes.[2]
AIDS research and activism
After the death of his partner Michel Foucault from complications related to AIDS, Defert founded AIDES, the first AIDS awareness organization in France.[1][3] The name invokes the French word for "help" as well as the English acronym for the disease (the French acronym is SIDA).
Defert served as president of AIDES from to [1]
Defert was a member of the scientific committee for human sciences of the International Conference on AIDS (–94); member of the World Commission for AIDS (World Health Organization) (–93); member of the National Committee for AIDS (–98), of the Global AIDS Policy Coalition of Harvard University (–), and of the French Haut Comité de la Santé Publique (from ).[citation needed]
Defert was the author of numerous articles in the domain of ethno-iconography and public health.[4] He was awarded the decoration of Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur[5] and received the Alexander Onassis prize for the creation of AIDES in [6]
Foucault estate
After Foucault's death, Defert inherited his estate despite the fact that their partnership preceded French government recognition of gay couples through civil unions () or marriage ()[7] and Foucault left no official will; however Foucault had written a letter indicating his intention to bequeath his apartment and all its contents, which included his archive and corrected proofs for an unpublished manuscript, to Defert.[8] Other family members deferred to Foucault's wishes, but without government recognition, Defert, like other surviving partners in a similar position, was still subject to much higher inheritance taxes than he would have been as a recognized family member.[7]
Defert co-edited, with François Ewald, volume 4 of Dits et Ecrits of Michel Foucault (), a posthumous collection of Foucault's writing.[citation needed]
In , Defert sold for €m ($m, May )[9] Foucault's archives to France's national library, making the material available to researchers; subsequently the family, which owns the literary rights, elected to publish the manuscript (Confessions of the Flesh, , the fourth and final volume of Foucault's History of Sexuality), despite Foucault's instruction that no work be published posthumously.[8] Defert explained the decision that after the material became available to researchers with the credentials to acquire a reader card at the national library,[8] Defert and others close to Foucault felt that access should be either available "to everyone or no one".[7] Additionally, many previous posthumous works had already been published,[10] and Defert felt this new addition did not make any encroachment on Foucault's intimate life, but strictly contributed to the corpus of his intellectual contributions;[7] by contrast, the letters exchanged between the two of them, Defert said in , he intended to "take to his grave."[7]
Death
Defert died in Paris on 7 February , at the age of [11]
References
- ^ abcDelaporte, Michel (19 September ).
"" Quand on questionne les marges, on arrive au cœur de la politique " Daniel Defert". L'Humanité. Retrieved 11 August
- ^"DANIEL DEFERT". WELCOME TO UPRISING 13/13. Retrieved 3 March
- ^"La création d'Aides".Daniel defert foucault But it was when he met Michel Foucault in that his life took a decisive turn. Their romantic relationship as well as their intellectual collaboration profoundly influenced Defert. Politically engaged, in he co-founded the Prison Information Group GIP , which set itself the mission of denouncing detention conditions in France. Thanks to his constant commitment and his significant contributions in these areas, Daniel Defert is today considered a major figure in the fight for the rights and health of minorities. Daniel Defert is an eminent personality in the French intellectual and activist world.
16 February
- ^Işıl Baş, Donald Cary Freeman (eds.), Challenging the Boundaries, Rodopi, , p. x.
- ^"Mort de Daniel Defert&#;: nous poursuivrons sa lutte contre le VIH/sida". Têtu (in French). Retrieved 7 February
- ^"POTENTIAL NOBEL PURSUITS - UPI Archives".
UPI. 27 May Retrieved 7 February
- ^ abcdeAeschimann, Eric; Monnin, Isabelle (26 November ). "Daniel Defert&#;: "Les archives de Foucault ont une histoire politique"".
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Donald Trump attempts to establish an 'imperial presidency' in the US. Brussels, faced with Musk's algorithms and Trump's tariffs, tries to show its strength. Sarkozy-Gaddafi trial: Hortefeux plays dumb but struggles to explain a visit to Libya. Sarkozy-Gaddafi trial: Former president and well-connected friend deny Libyan campaign financing charges. Abortion has been legal in France for 50 years.Le Nouvel Observateur. Retrieved 11 August
- ^ abcLibbey, Peter (8 February ). "Michel Foucault's Unfinished Book Published in France". The New York Times.Daniel defert biography wikipedia Defert was the heir to Foucault's estate. Daniel Defert was born on 10 September Defert was the author of numerous articles in the domain of ethno-iconography and public health. After Foucault's death, Defert inherited his estate despite the fact that their partnership preceded French government recognition of gay couples through civil unions or marriage [7] and Foucault left no official will; however Foucault had written a letter indicating his intention to bequeath his apartment and all its contents, which included his archive and corrected proofs for an unpublished manuscript, to Defert. Defert died in Paris on 7 February , at the age of
ISSN&#; Retrieved 6 April
- ^"Archives à vendre ou à laisser". Le . 20 December
- ^Flood, Alison (12 February ). "'Key' fourth book of Foucault's History of Sexuality published in France".
- Daniel Defert - Wikipedia
- Daniel Defert - Wikiwand / articles
- Biography of Daniel Defert
- Daniel Defert, Chronology - PhilPapers
- Daniel Defert – Wikipedia
- ^"Daniel Defert, philosophe, sociologue et figure de la lutte contre le sida, est mort". Le (in French). 7 February Retrieved 7 February
The Guardian. Retrieved 6 April
External links
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Essays, lectures, dialogues and anthologies |
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