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Michel Foucault Didier Eribon (editor at Le Nouvel Observateur)

Michel Foucault By Didier Eribon (editor at Le Nouvel Observateur)

Michel Foucault by Didier Eribon (editor at Le Nouvel Observateur)


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Condition - Very Good
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Summary

Drawing on eyewitness accounts of friends and associates from all periods of Foucault's life, Eribon follows the career of this renowned French intellectual, and at the same time reconstructs the cultural, political, and intellectual life of France from the post-war years to the present.

Michel Foucault Summary

Michel Foucault by Didier Eribon (editor at Le Nouvel Observateur)

At the time of his death in 1984, at the age of 58, Michel Foucault was widely regarded as one of the most powerful minds of the 20th century. Hailed by distinguished historians and lionized on his frequent visits to America, he continues to provoke lively debate. The nature and merits of his accomplishments remain tangled in controversy. Rejecting traditional liberal and Marxist dreams of solidarity, Foucault became the very model of the modern intellectual, replacing Sartre as the figure of the eminent Parisian and cosmopolitan master thinker. Foucault himself discouraged biographical questions, claiming that he was not at all interesting. Didier Eribon's account contests that assertion. Well acquainted with Foucault before his death, Eribon has drawn from the eyewitness accounts of Foucault's closest friends and associates from all phases of his life - his mother, his schoolteachers, his classmates, his friends and enemies in academic life, and his celebrated companions in political activism, including Jean Genet, Simone Signoret, and Yves Montand. Eribon has methodically retraced the footsteps of his peripatetic subject, from France to Sweden to Poland to Germany to Tunisia to Brazil to Japan to the United States. Who was this man, Michel Foucault? In the late 1950s Foucault emerged as a budding young cultural attache, friendly with Gaullist diplomats. By the mid-1960s he appeared as one of the avatars of structuralism, positioning himself as a new star in the fashionable world of French thought. A few months after the May 1968 student revolt, with Gaullism apparently shaken, he emerged as an ultra-leftist and a fellow traveler of Maoists. Yet during this same period, Eribon shows, he was quietly and adroitly campaigning for a chair in the College de France - the very pinnacle of the conservative French academic system. This book follows the career of one extraordinary intellectual and reconstructs the cultural, political and intellectual life of France from the postwar years to the present. It is the story of a man and his time.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Psychology in hell: The City Where I Was Born; the voice of Hegel; Rue d'Ulm; the carnival of madmen; Stalin's shoemaker; discords of love; Uppsala, Warsaw, Hamburg. Part 2 The order of things: the talent of a poet; the book and its doubles; the dandy and the reforms; opening bodies; ramparts of the bourgeoisie; the open sea. Part 3 Militant and Professor at the College de France: a Vincennes interlude; the solitude of the acrobat; a lesson from the darkness; popular justice and the workers' memory; We Are All Ruled; a revolution of bare hands; missed appointments; Zen and California; life as a work of art.

Additional information

GOR007359345
9780674572874
0674572874
Michel Foucault by Didier Eribon (editor at Le Nouvel Observateur)
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Harvard University Press
19911106
390
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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