
Problems of Style
Michel Foucault's Epistemology
Walter Privitera(Author)
State University of New York Press
Published on 17. January 1995
Book
Hardback
168 pages
978-0-7914-2333-2 (ISBN)
Description
This is a unification of Michel Foucault's thought as a systematic epistemological project. Privitera shows that the method and unity of Foucault's writings can only be seen by examining their origins in the work of Bachelard and Canguilhem.
Reviews / Votes
In this original reading, Privitera argues for a continuity in Foucault's work best seen when various themes and methodological strategies in his writings are traced back to the influence of Gaston Bachelard. The distinct stages in Foucault's development-from archaeology to genealogy and, finally, to the themes of subjectivization and normalization-can be viewed as different attempts to work out within the context of the human sciences insights and problems contained in Bachelard's constructivist philosophy of science. Moreover, by relating them to Bachelard's notions of philosophy and the creative spirit, Privitera is able to place in a new perspective the charge that Foucault's "anti-science" and "anti-humanism" undermine the possibility of critique. The result is a systematic, but not uncritical, interpretation of Foucault's entire corpus-including his treatment of power-in which both theory construction and emancipatory critique are primarily perceived as "problems of style.""This is an insightful work; more important though is the author's sympathy for Foucault's project(s). The author is a subtle thinker but never loses sight of the larger epistemological issues in question. I think he has done a very commendable job of explaining the details and nuances within Foucault's work without losing himself in the process." - Thomas Huhn, Wabash College
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Albany, NY
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
US School Grade: College Graduate Student and over
Weight
426 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7914-2333-2 (9780791423332)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Walter Privitera is Professor of Sociology at the University of Calabria, Italy.
Content
Preface
Preface to the American Edition
Introduction
1. Bachelard's Historical Epistemology
Scientific Progress and Traditional Epistemology
Constructions
Interregional Rationalism and Discontinuity
The Epistemological Obstacle
Bachelard's Philosophy
2. Foucault: The Early Writings and the Structuralist Period
Dream Analysis
The Dream, Madness, and the Critique of Psychology
The Critique of the Human Sciences
Anti-Science
3. The Archaeology
The Disintegration of Immediacy
Statement, Discourse, Rules of Formation
The Semiologization of the Imaginary
The Neutralization of the Validity Problematic
4. The Theory of Power
The Dualism within Power
Descent and Emergence: The Dualism within Genealogy
The Will to Knowledge and Traditional Epistemology
Power and Life-Practice
The Creative A Priori
5. An Overview
The Struggle for Objectification
New Subjects of Struggles
Hidden Normativity
Foucault's "Applied Rationalism"
A Technology of Liberation?
The Aesthetics of Existence
6. Concluding Remarks
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Preface to the American Edition
Introduction
1. Bachelard's Historical Epistemology
Scientific Progress and Traditional Epistemology
Constructions
Interregional Rationalism and Discontinuity
The Epistemological Obstacle
Bachelard's Philosophy
2. Foucault: The Early Writings and the Structuralist Period
Dream Analysis
The Dream, Madness, and the Critique of Psychology
The Critique of the Human Sciences
Anti-Science
3. The Archaeology
The Disintegration of Immediacy
Statement, Discourse, Rules of Formation
The Semiologization of the Imaginary
The Neutralization of the Validity Problematic
4. The Theory of Power
The Dualism within Power
Descent and Emergence: The Dualism within Genealogy
The Will to Knowledge and Traditional Epistemology
Power and Life-Practice
The Creative A Priori
5. An Overview
The Struggle for Objectification
New Subjects of Struggles
Hidden Normativity
Foucault's "Applied Rationalism"
A Technology of Liberation?
The Aesthetics of Existence
6. Concluding Remarks
Notes
Bibliography
Index