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  1. Foucault, Experience, Literature.Timothy OʹLeary - 2008 - Foucault Studies 5:5-25.
  • Between fiction and reflection: Foucault and the experience-book. [REVIEW]Timothy Rayner - 2003 - Continental Philosophy Review 36 (1):27-43.
    Foucault notoriously suggests that his historical analyses are fictions. Commentators typically interpret this claim in a negative light to mean that Foucault's works are not, strictly speaking, true. In this paper, I present a positive interpretation of Foucault's claim, basing my argument on a hitherto marginalized aspect of his work: the experience-book. An experience-book is defined as a use of fiction in the practice of critique with desubjectifying effects. My argument for this interpretation proceeds in three steps. First, to prepare (...)
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  • Michel Foucault: the freedom of philosophy.John Rajchman - 1985 - New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Foucault and Literature: Towards a Genealogy of Writing.Simon During - 1992 - Psychology Press.
    The writings of the French historian, literary critic and philosopher Michel Foucault have been of immense importance to developments in literary studies since the late 1970s. He, more than anyone, stands behind the new historicism and cultural materialism that currently dominate international literary studies. Simon During provides a detailed introduction to the whole body of Foucault's work, with a particular emphasis on his literary theory. His study takes in Foucault's early studies of transgressive writing from Sade and Artaud to the (...)
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  • The Object of Literature.Pierre Macherey - 1995 - Cambridge University Press.
    At once a theoretical meditation of great originality and a historical work of scrupulous scholarship, this new book by Pierre Macherey is his first dealing with literature and theory since his seminal A Theory of Literary Production. Continuing the project of Althusserian theory, Macherey engages in a series of close exegeses of classical texts in French literature and philosophy, from the late eighteenth century down to the 1970s, that explore the historically variable but thematically similar ways in which literary texts (...)
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  • The Order of Things.Michel Foucault - 1970 - Tavistock.
    Like the latter, it unites into one and the same function the possibility of giving things a sign, of representing one thing by another, and the possibility of causing a sign to shift in relation to what it designates. The four functions that define the ...
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  • History of Madness.Michel Foucault - 1961/2006 - Routledge.
    When it was first published in France in 1961 as Folie et Déraison: Histoire de la Folie à l'âge Classique , few had heard of a thirty-four year old philosopher by the name of Michel Foucault. By the time an abridged English edition was published in 1967 as Madness and Civilization , Michel Foucault had shaken the intellectual world. This translation is the first English edition of the complete French texts of the first and second edition, including all prefaces and (...)
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  • L'ordre du discours.M. Foucault - 1971
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  • Truth and Power (1977).Michel Foucault - 2007 - In Craig J. Calhoun (ed.), Contemporary Sociological Theory. Blackwell. pp. 201--208.
     
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  • Foucault, Literature, Experience.“.Timothy O'Leary - 2008 - Foucault Studies 5:5-25.
     
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