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Since the early 1970s, European thinkers have departed notably from
their predecessors in order to pursue analytical programs more
thoroughly their own. Rethinking the Subject brings together in one
volume some of the most influential writings of Foucault, Habermas,
Bourdieu, Pizzorno, Macfarlane, and other authors whose ideas have
had a worldwide
What need is there for kinship? What good is it anyway? The
questions are as old as anthropology itself, but few answers have
been enduringly persuasive. Kinship systems can contribute to our
enslavement, but more often they permit, channel, and facilitate
our relations with others and our further fashioning of
ourselves--as kin but also as subjects of other kinds. When they
do, they are among the matrices of our lives as ethical beings.
Each contributor to this innovative book treats his or her own
alterity as the touchstone of the exploration of an
ethnographically and historically specific ethics of kinship.
Together, the chapters reveal the irreducible complexity of the
entanglement of the subject of kinship with the subject of nation,
class, ethnicity, gender, desire. The chapters speak eloquently to
the sometimes liberating stories that we cannot help but keep
telling about our kin and ourselves.
Since the early seventies, European thinkers have departed notably
from their predecessors in order to pursue analytical programs more
thoroughly their own. Rethinking the Subject brings together in one
volume some of the most influential writings of Foucault, Habermas,
Bourdieu, Pizzorno, Macfarlane, and other authors whose ideas have
had a worldwide influence in recent social theory. This anthology
is testament to the central importance of three contemporary
themes, each familiar to earlier thinkers but never definitively
formulated or resolved. The first two concern the nature and
modalities of power and legitimacy in society. The third, and most
fundamental, deals with the nature and modalities of the "self" or
"subject." These themes owe their special contemporary relevance to
an array of events- from the collapse of colonialism to the birth
of test-tube babies. James Faubion's introduction traces the
historical context of these influential events and themes. It also
traces the lineaments of a still inchoate intellectual movement, of
which the anthology's contributors are the vanguard. Whether
"modernist" or "post-modernist," this movement leads away from a
"world-constituting subject," which in one guise or another has
served as the ontological ground of social reflection and research
since Kant. It points instead toward ontological pluralism and
toward polythetic diagnostics of heterogeneous forces that
constitute a multiplicity of worlds and subjects.
This book explores diverse but complementary interdisciplinary
approaches to the poetics, intertexts, and influence of the work of
C. P. Cavafy (Konstantinos Kavafis), one of the most important
twentieth-century European poets. Written by leading international
scholars in a number of disciplines (critical theory, gender
studies, comparative literature, English studies, Greek studies,
anthropology, classics), the essays of this volume situate Cavafy s
poetry within the broader contexts of modernism and aestheticism
and investigate its complex and innovative responses to European
literary traditions (from Greek antiquity to modernity) as well as
its multifaceted impact on major figures of world literature from
North America to South Africa.
Contributors include Eve Sedgwick, Helen Vendler, Dimitrios
Yatromanolakis, Richard Dellamora, Mark Doty, James Faubion, Diana
Haas, John Chioles, Edmund Keeley, Albert Henrichs, Kathleen
Coleman, Gregory Nagy, Michael Paschalis, Peter Jeffreys, Diskin
Clay, and Panagiotis Roilos.
"Death and the Labyrinth" is unique, being Foucault's only work on
literature. For Foucault this was "by far the book I wrote most
easily and with the greatest pleasure". Here, Foucault explores
theory, criticism and psychology through the texts of Raymond
Roussel, one of the fathers of experimental writing, whose work has
been celebrated by the likes of Cocteau, Duchamp, Breton, Robbe
Grillet, Gide and Giacometti. This revised edition includes: an
introduction, chronology and bibliography to Foucault's work by
James Faubion, an interview with Foucault, conducted only nine
months before his death, and concludes with an essay on Roussel by
the poet, John Ashbery.
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