French thinkers such as Lacan and Derrida are often labelled as representatives of 'poststructuralism' in the Anglophone world. However in France where their work originated they use no such category; this group of theorists - 'the poststructuralists' - were never perceived as a coherent intellectual group or movement. <br/> <br/> Outlining the institutional contexts affinities and rivalries of among others Althusser Barthes Foucault Irigaray and Kristeva Angermuller - drawing from Bourdieu's concepts of cultural capital and the academic field - insightfully explores post-structuralism as a phenomenon. By tracing the evolution of the French intellectual field after the war <i>Why There is No Poststructuralism in France</i> places French Theory both in the specific material conditions of its production and the social and historical contexts of its reception accounting for a particularly creative moment in French intellectual life which continues to inform the theoretical imaginary of our time.