Pagina principaleGruppiConversazioniAltroStatistiche
Cerca nel Sito
Questo sito utilizza i cookies per fornire i nostri servizi, per migliorare le prestazioni, per analisi, e (per gli utenti che accedono senza fare login) per la pubblicità. Usando LibraryThing confermi di aver letto e capito le nostre condizioni di servizio e la politica sulla privacy. Il tuo uso del sito e dei servizi è soggetto a tali politiche e condizioni.

Risultati da Google Ricerca Libri

Fai clic su di un'immagine per andare a Google Ricerca Libri.

Sto caricando le informazioni...

Nietzsche, Freud, Marx

di Michel Foucault

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiConversazioni
2111,056,391 (3.75)Nessuno
Nessuno
Sto caricando le informazioni...

Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro.

Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro.

It was David Bowie that first introduced me to Nietzsche, Freud, and Marx as a triad, the Holy Trinity of the 20th century--he was briefly enamoured of the idea around the time of his 2002 album Heathen that they created the our world of uncertainty by blowing away positivist ideas of God, the self, and human society, respectively. It's an idea I've since encountered other places (sometimes with Einstein included as blowerawayer of the stable physical laws of the Newtonian universe).


The idea isn't Bowie's, of course--it appears on superficial investigation to have originated in this 1964 essay of Foucault's. He's arguing something a bit different and more sophisticated, though--that the precise way in which NFM (as following and apropos of this essay they've sometimes been acronymized!) unsettle the post-Enlightenent isn't just by blowing up certainties--it's by revealing that underlying the superficial taxonomic structures of empiricism, where we understand what things are based on their differences from other things, there's a deeper and more radical interpretative (as opposed to explanatory) framework based on resemblance--a return to the hermeneutic fundamentals of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, perhaps in the fullness of time a new Great Chain of Being. It's a precis of his argument in The Order of Things a few years later, in other words, and he trots out all the similarities--convenience and sympathy and analogy--that he gets into in greater depth there (and, being Foucault, with just as little citing of sources). It reads like a quiet declaration of intent--he is yare to start systematizing his world. It's not really about NFM; he is more using them to construct a break and complete the cleaning of the slate. He does have a gift for the pithy and yet endlessly unpackable observation that reminds me more of Zizek than any of his cotemporaries--Marx destroyed bourgeois pieties by exposing them as "platitudes"; he sees Nietzsche as a radical philologist, who moves beyond positivism by an exquisite combination of "pure language and madness".


Definitely, though, Foucault represents himself here as a strident, absolutist organizer--the very opposite of a poststructuralist--even to the point of reclaiming the great unsettlers as absolute systematizers themselves. He doesn't really make the argument here so much as refer to it, and if this interests you you'd do better to read The Order of Things or, I dunno, a history of the 19th century. But it makes me feel more confident about exactly where and how F. sits in the ol' intellectual topography. In Nietzsche, cahiers du Rouyaumont. ( )
1 vota MeditationesMartini | Feb 2, 2011 |
nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Devi effettuare l'accesso per contribuire alle Informazioni generali.
Per maggiori spiegazioni, vedi la pagina di aiuto delle informazioni generali.
Titolo canonico
Titolo originale
Titoli alternativi
Data della prima edizione
Personaggi
Luoghi significativi
Eventi significativi
Film correlati
Epigrafe
Dedica
Incipit
Citazioni
Ultime parole
Nota di disambiguazione
Redattore editoriale
Elogi
Lingua originale
DDC/MDS Canonico
LCC canonico

Risorse esterne che parlano di questo libro

Wikipedia in inglese

Nessuno

Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche

Descrizione del libro
Riassunto haiku

Discussioni correnti

Nessuno

Copertine popolari

Link rapidi

Voto

Media: (3.75)
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3 2
3.5
4 1
4.5
5 1

Sei tu?

Diventa un autore di LibraryThing.

 

A proposito di | Contatto | LibraryThing.com | Privacy/Condizioni d'uso | Guida/FAQ | Blog | Negozio | APIs | TinyCat | Biblioteche di personaggi celebri | Recensori in anteprima | Informazioni generali | 204,674,166 libri! | Barra superiore: Sempre visibile