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Franz Kafka and Michel Foucault: Power, Resistance, and the Art of Self-Creation [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 186 pages, height x width x depth: 238x160x18 mm, weight: 417 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Mar-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 0739177036
  • ISBN-13: 9780739177037
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  • Cena: 130,14 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 186 pages, height x width x depth: 238x160x18 mm, weight: 417 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Mar-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 0739177036
  • ISBN-13: 9780739177037
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
With the publication of Michel Foucaults last essays detailing his account of the aesthetics of existence and a post-metaphysical ethics, we now have an outline for a comprehensive Foucaultian analytical framework. Foucaults analytical schema is arranged around three interdependent observations. First, subjects are formed through discursive and material force relations that Foucault calls disciplinary power. Second, while individuals inescapably bear the inscription of disciplinary power, there are multiple sites of resistance available to them. And third, the normative purpose of resistance and life is found in the self-conscious pursuit of aesthetic transformation and self-creationwhat Foucault calls ethics. For Foucault, philosophy, critique, and writing are agonistic and creative tools in the practice and cultivation of what he calls the art of life.

In Franz Kafka and Michel Foucault: Power, Resistance, and the Art of Self-Creation, Nicholas Dungey examines Foucaults holistic project and applies it to a critical interpretation of Kafkas writings. In Part I, Dungey argues that in Kafkas, In the Penal Colony, and The Trial, we find evidence of the presence and operation of disciplinary power, strategies, and forms of subjectivity. In the Penal Colony and The Trial exhibit the central themes of Foucaults dystopian analysis of Enlightenment rationality, subjectivity, and politics. In Part II, Dungey moves from a genealogical analysis of disciplinary power and subjectivity in Kafkas literature to an examination of Foucaults account of resistance, the aesthetics of existence, and ethics. Turning to Kafkas voluminous letters and diary entries, Dungey identifies the way Kafkas letters and diaries operate as strategies of resistance against disciplinary norms and expectations and ultimately serve as the artistic vehicle through which Kafka pursued a form of aesthetic self-creation he called life as literature.

Recenzijas

By reading Kafka through Foucault, Dungey illuminates and deepens Kafkas striking claim that he was nothing but literature and could not and did not want to be anything else. In Dungeys close analysis, Kafkas life as a work of art becomes both an act of self-creation that contains its own dangers and possibilities and a form of resistance that contests the normalizing forces of society. -- P.E. Digeser, Professor, University of California at Santa Barbara

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction ix
Part I Identifying the Operation and Effects of Disciplinary Power in Kafka's "In the Penal Colony" and The Trial
1(62)
1 Power, Discourse, and Subjectivity
3(26)
2 Disciplinary Power and the Apparatus in "In the Penal Colony"
29(16)
3 Disciplinary Power, the Law, and the Arrest in The Trial
45(18)
Part II The Modalities of Resistance and the Process of Aesthetic Self-Creation in Kafka's Writings
63(82)
4 Writing, Resistance, and Freedom
65(40)
5 Writing and the Art of Self-Creation
105(40)
Conclusion 145(6)
Bibliography 151(4)
Index 155(8)
About the Author 163
Nicholas Dungey is professor of political philosophy in the Department of Political Science at California State University, Northridge.