"Expertly edited, this thoughtful translation of Disorderly Families adds a central pillar to the English archive of Michel Foucaults work. A source of fascination for him since at least the 1950s, the Bastille lettres de cachets deeply influenced and shaped his analysis of power. As he discovered, these letters were what he and Arlette Farge would call a popular practice, demanded from below, and not an arbitrary exercise of monarchical power-and they would become a key building block for Foucaults theory of power-knowledge. This exceptional English translation gives life to Foucaults-and Farges-subversive desire to breathe life into these beautiful, infamous, and obscure lives."-Bernard E. Harcourt, Columbia University
"An enlightening compilation that will leave historically inclined readers wanting to dig a little further into the archives."-Kirkus Reviews
"Thirty-five years on, the study of obscure individual lives has become a valued feature of historical research and the source of new perspectives in the understanding of social and political contexts. [ But quite apart from this change in the attitude of historians], the letters themselves seem to have aged better than the intellectual disagreements and academic disputes that accompanied their original publication."-Times Literary Supplement