Abstract
In the growing literature accumulated since May 1968, the French upheaval has been interpreted essentially as a protest against the established system of authority and, in various degrees, as a rejection of rationalized organization of the social, labor and educational sectors. Some ten years later, while the psychological dynamics and inner rationality of the event remain far from clear, its brevity and its admittedly limited impact are becoming less of a mystery. For, even when pared down to the essentials of a fundamentally student-inspired insurrection against the institutions of knowledge and, therefore, doomed by the rationality of the system at large, the direction of recent French thought suggests that May fell short of its target in the intellectual climate as well: the spirit of objectivism—already rooted deeply since the early 1960s with the spread of structuralism—has proved itself resilient, all claims to the contrary notwithstanding