“…We do not define “public” as opposed to “private” or “common,” but as what is or becomes important for the public in different contexts, which is then configured as an “audience”. This public is neither static nor permanent, and certain situations can produce its concentration, as in “captivating the public’s attention” around issues that become relevant, which is also partly explained by the performative logics of intellectual intervention (Bar-El & Baert, 2021 ). Thus, when a crisis arises, whether political, social, or economic, this historical event gathers a public around a specific topic, and the public intellectual intervenes, either to subvert the order or — a matter that is sometimes forgotten — to reproduce or preserve it (as, for example, in the case of “public intellectuals at the service of Trump”: Swartz, 2021 ).…”