Tiqqun


Tiqqun is the name of a French leftist philosophical journal, founded in 1999 with an aim to "recreate the conditions of another community." It was created by various writers before dissolving in Venice, Italy in 2001 following the attacks of September 11, 2001. Tiqqun was the object of some interest in the media after the arrest of Julien Coupat, one of its founders. The journal was short-lived; only two issues were produced.
Tiqqun is also, more generally, the name of the philosophical concept which stems from these texts, and is often used in a broad sense to name the many publications containing the journal's texts, in order to designate, if not a specific author, at least "a point of spirit from which these writings come."
Tiqqun became better known to an American audience in 2009 and 2010 after Glenn Beck featured commentary on the English edition of The Coming Insurrection in his media broadcasts.

Articles

Eleven articles were published in the journal's first issue, and ten articles were published in its second issue. Additionally, nine smaller pieces were interspersed between each of the second issue's ten main articles; these latter were two-page spreads with black backgrounds. In all, thirty items were published in the journal, listed below.
IssueFrench TitleEnglish TitlePage No.
Tiqqun #1Eh bien, la guerre!Well, War!3
Tiqqun #1Qu'est-ce que la Métaphysique Critique?What is Critical Metaphysics?7
Tiqqun #1Théorie du BloomTheory of Bloom23
Tiqqun #1Phénoménologie de la vie quotidiennePhenomenology of Everyday Life46
Tiqqun #1Thèses sur le Parti ImaginaireTheses on the Imaginary Party50
Tiqqun #1Le silence et son au-delàSilence and Beyond72
Tiqqun #1De l'économie considérée comme magie noireEconomy as Black Magic80
Tiqqun #1Premiers matériaux pour une théorie de la Jeune-FillePreliminary Materials for a Theory of the Young-Girl94
Tiqqun #1Hommes-machines, mode d'emploiMachine-Men: a User's Guide127
Tiqqun #1Les métaphysiciens-critiques sous le «mouvement des chômeurs»Critical Metaphysicians behind the "Movement of the Unemployed"137
Tiqqun #1Quelques actions d'éclat du Parti ImaginaireA Few Scandalous Actions of the Imaginary Party146
Tiqqun #2Introduction à la guerre civileIntroduction to Civil War2
Tiqqun #2Dernier avertissement au parti imaginaireFinal Warning to the Imaginary Party38
Tiqqun #2L'hypothèse cybernétiqueThe Cybernetic Hypothesis40
Tiqqun #2Les vainqueurs avaient vaincu sans peineThe Conquerors had Won Easily84
Tiqqun #2Thèses sur la communauté terribleTheses on the Terrible Community86
Tiqqun #2Tout mouvement excèdeAll Movements Exceed112
Tiqqun #2Le problème de la têteThe Problem of the Head114
Tiqqun #2Ceux qui ne veulent pas du progrès, le progrès ne veut pas d'euxProgress doesn't want Those who don't want Progress128
Tiqqun #2«Une métaphysique critique pourrait naître comme science des dispositifs...»"A Critical Metaphysics could be Born as a Science of Apparatuses..."130
Tiqqun #2Halte à la domestiCAFion!Stop DomestiCAFtion!160
Tiqqun #2Rapport à la S.A.S.C. concernant un dispositif impérialReport to the S.A.S.C. Concerning an Imperial Apparatus162
Tiqqun #2Notes sur le localNotes on the Local176
Tiqqun #2Le petit jeu de l'homme d'Ancien RégimeThe Little Game of the Man of the Ancien Régime178
Tiqqun #2On a toujours l'âge de déserterYou're Never Too Old to Ditch Out192
Tiqqun #2Échographie d'une puissanceUltrasound of a Power194
Tiqqun #2Bonjour!Hello!234
Tiqqun #2Ceci n'est pas un programmeThis is Not a Program236
Tiqqun #2Ma noi ci saremoBut We Will Be There272
Tiqqun #2Comment faire?How should it be done?278

Authorship

Tiqqun's articles are not credited to individual authors; rather, they are simply attributed to the journal's namesake. However the first issue's back cover contained a masthead which listed the issue's editorial board as Julien Boudart, Fulvia Carnevale, Julien Coupat, Junius Frey, Joël Gayraud, Stephan Hottner and Rémy Ricordeau.

Origin and use of the name

The name of the journal comes from the great importance that the writers give to the philosophical concept of Tiqqun. It is the French transcription of the original Hebrew term Tikkun olam, a concept issuing from Judaism, often used in the kabbalistic and messianic traditions, which simultaneously indicates reparation, restitution, and redemption. It has also come to designate, more broadly, a contemporary Jewish conception of social justice.

Affiliations

Tiqqun’s poetic style and radical political engagement are akin to the Situationists and the Lettrists. Tiqqun has influenced radical political and philosophical milieus, post-Situationist groups, and other elements of ultra-left, squat and autonomist movements, as well as some anarchists. Tiqqun’s themes and concepts are strongly influenced by the work of the Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben, who in turn wrote a public editorial supporting Coupat's due process legal rights.

English translations

Selected articles from Tiqqun have been translated into a variety of languages and released as standalone books. Following is a list of English editions.