Michel Foucault : Beyond structuralism and hermeneutics / Hubert L. Dreyfus & Paul Rabinow
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: London : Routledge, r 2020.Edition: 1st edDescription: xxiii, 231 p.: 24 cmISBN:- 9780367475550
- 23 194 DRE
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
General Books | CUTN Central Library Philosophy & psychology | Non-fiction | 194 DRE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 47182 |
Browsing CUTN Central Library shelves, Shelving location: Philosophy & psychology, Collection: Non-fiction Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
193 WOO Understanding Nietzscheanism / | 194 COL Gilles Deleuze / | 194 COL Jacques Derrida : key concepts / | 194 DRE Michel Foucault : Beyond structuralism and hermeneutics / | 194 HAT The philosophy of Sartre / | 194 KAU Art, language and figure in Merleau-Ponty : | 194 SIM Paul Ricoeur / |
Part I: The Illusion of Autonomous Discourse.
- 1. Practices and Discourse in Foucault's Early Writings
- 2. The Archaeology of the Human Sciences
- 3. Towards a Theory of Discursive Practice
- 4. The Methodological Failure of Archaeology
Part II: The Genealogy of the Modern Individual: The Interpretive Analytics of Power, Truth, and the Body.
- 5. Interpretive Analytics
- 6. From the Repressive Hypothesis to Bio-Power
- 7. The Genealogy of the Modern Individual as Object
- 8. The Genealogy of the Modern Individual as Subject
- 9. Power and Truth
This book, which Foucault himself has judged accurate, is the first to provide a sustained, coherent analysis of Foucault's work as a whole. To demonstrate the sense in which Foucault's work is beyond structuralism and hermeneutics, the authors unfold a careful, analytical exposition of his oeuvre. They argue that during the of Foucault's work became a sustained and largely successful effort to develop a new method -- "interpretative analytics"--Capable of explaining both the logic of structuralism's claim to be an objective science and the apparent validity of the hermeneutical counterclaim that the human sciences can proceed only by understanding the deepest meaning of the subject and his tradition
There are no comments on this title.