As a transformative thinker of the twentieth century, whose work spanned all branches of the humanities, Michel Foucault had a complex and profound relationship with literature. And yet this critical aspect of his thought, because it was largely expressed in speeches and interviews, remains virtually unknown to even his most loyal readers. This book brings together previously unpublished transcripts of oral presentations in which Foucault speaks at length about literature and its links to some of his principal themes: madness, language and criticism, and truth and desire. The associations between madness and language—and madness and silence—preoccupy Foucault in two 1963 radio broadcasts, presented here, in which he ranges among literary examples from Cervantes and Shakespeare to Diderot, before taking up questions about Artaud’s literary correspondence, lettres de cachet, and the materiality of language. In his lectures on the relations among language, the literary work, and literature, he discusses Joyce, Proust, Chateaubriand, Racine, and Corneille, as well as the linguist Roman Jakobson. What we know as literature, Foucault contends, begins with the Marquis de Sade, to whose writing—particularly La Nouvelle Justine and Juliette—he devotes a full two-part lecture series focusing on notions of literary self-consciousness. Following his meditations on history in the recently published Speech Begins after Death, this current volume makes clear the importance of literature to Foucault’s thought and intellectual development.
... Mitchell's term: One might regard the relational matrix within which each of us lives as a tapestry [...] whose design is rich with interacting figures. Some represent images and metaphors around which one's self is experienced; ...
... Desire: On Literature, ed. Philippe Artières, Jean- François Bert, Mathieu Potte- Bonneville, and Judith Revel, trans ... (Madness in Baroque Theater and the Theater of Artaud),” in this volume: “Cardenio ... believes himself to be ...
Now in paperback, Wiesel’s newest novel “reminds us, with force, that his writing is alive and strong.
... , Mathieu Potte- Bonneville & Judith Revel, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ____. (2015) “What is the Language of Literature?”. In: Michel Foucault: Language, Madness, and Desire. On Literature, ed. Philippe Artières,
Michel Foucault examines the archeology of madness in the West from 1500 to 1800 - from the late Middle Ages, when insanity was still considered part of everyday life and fools and lunatics walked the streets freely, to the time when such ...
... language such that it could find an equivalent in the other language; between the two languages there is incommensurability ... Madness, and Desire: On Literature, trans. Robert Bononno (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2015) ...
Hamilton then traces the linkage of music and madness that courses through the work of Herder, Hegel, Wackenroder, and Kleist before turning his attention to E. T. A. Hoffmann, whose writings of the first decades of the nineteenth century ...
This volume explores what the form of an academic history book might look like by playing with fictioning as part of the historian's craft.
"This slim volume, published in the same series as Foucault's Language, Madness, and Desire. It brings together two lectures that Lévi-Strauss gave on the French essayist Montaigne: one given in 1937 and the second in 1992"--
The psychotic makes a breach in the organization of language , and in so doing enables us to look back to the period before the individual acquires language , to the pre - verbal era of the semiotic organization of instincts .