Julia Kristeva is a leading French intellectual, practicing psychoanalyst, and Professor of Linguistics at the
Universite de Paris VII. Columbia University Press has published other books by Kristeva in English: In the Beginning
Was Love, Tales of Love, Revolution in Poetic Language, Powers of Horror, Desire in Language, Black Sun, Language:
The Unknown, and The Kristeva Reader.
Review
"[The book] demonstrates her amazing command of history, politics, literature, linguistics, and psychology
[and] argues powerfully for a radical examination of self, beginning with the realization that what is most fearful
to us in the stranger may be the very quality we do not want to recognize in ourselves. Only through this reconciliation
with our estranged self, Kristeva asserts, can we begin to give fair treatment to others."
--San Francisco Examiner-Chronicle
Columbia University Press Web Site, March, 2000
Summary
This book is concerned with the notion of the "stranger" -the foreigner, outsider, or alien in a country
and society not their own- as well as the notion of strangeness within the self -a person's deep sense of being,
as distinct from outside appearance and their conscious idea of self.
Kristeva begins with the personal and moves outward by examining world literature and philosophy. She discusses
the foreigner in Greek tragedy, in the Bible, and in the literature of the Middle Ages, Renaissance, Enlightenment,
and the twentieth century. She discusses the legal status of foreigners throughout history, gaining perspective
on our own civilization. Her insights into the problems of nationality, particularly in France are more timely
and relevant in an increasingly integrated and fractious world.