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Expression in Contested Public Spaces: Free Speech and Civic
Engagement addresses how people express themselves and their
differences, in ways that amplify the many voices central to the
mission of democracy. This book investigates in what ways and in
what discursive forms people interrupt the status quo or unjust
practices to advance positive social change. The chapters feature
research activity, engaged scholarship, and creative expression to
boldly frame the issues of free speech-amid attempts to chill and
silence expressions of dissent-in order to demonstrate how
community organizers, activists, and scholars use their voices to
advance peace and justice befitting the human condition. Scholars
and students of communication and the social sciences will find
this book particularly interesting.
Though Michel Foucault is one of the most important thinkers of the
twentieth century, little is known about his early life. Even
Foucault’s biographers have neglected this period, preferring
instead to start the story when the future philosopher arrives in
Paris. Becoming Foucault is a historical reconstruction of the
world in which Foucault grew up: the small city of Poitiers,
France, from the 1920s until the end of the Second World War.
Beyond exploring previously unexamined aspects of Foucault’s
childhood, including his wartime ordeals, it proposes an original
interpretation of Foucault’s oeuvre. Michael Behrent argues that
Foucault, in addition to being a theorist of power, knowledge, and
selfhood, was also a philosopher of experience. He was a thinker
intent on making sense of the events that he lived through. Behrent
identifies four specific experiences in Foucault’s childhood that
exercised a decisive influence on him and that, in various ways, he
later made the subject of his philosophy: his family’s deep
connections to the medical profession; his upbringing in a
bourgeois household; the German Occupation during World War II; and
his Catholic education. Behrent not only reconstructs the specific
nature of these experiences but also shows how reference to them
surfaces in Foucault’s later work. In this way, the book both
sheds light on a formative period in the philosopher’s life and
offers a unique interpretation of key aspects of his thought.
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R205
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