Dear Thomas,
Concerning F's introduction to K's Anthropologie, _dits et
ecrits_ has the following information to offer:
"En 1961, MF presente comme these complementaire pour l'obtention
de doctorat es lettres une traduction annotee, de 347 pages,
d'Anthropologie in pragmatischer Hinsichtabgefasst, d'EK, precedee d'une
introduction de 128 pages. L'ensemble est conserve sours forme
dactylographiee par la bibliotheque de la Sorbonne. F ne publia que la
traduction precedee de cette "notice historique."
In good old English:
"In 1961, MF present[ed] a 347-page annotated translation of EK's
Anthropology preceeded by a 128-page introduction as [part of the
requirements for his doctoral degree]. The work in its entirety is kept
in type-written form at the library of the Sorbonne. F only published
the translation and this "historical notice."
The historical notice is text #19 in _dits et ecrits_. Send me a
message if you need the French text; I would not mind at all sending it
to you via snail. (I've just entered some 10 pages of text from this
book and don't think I could stand doing another one).
sincerely,
dda
On Fri, 15 Mar 1996, Thomas M. Orange wrote:
> Listmembers:
>
> Wondering if anyone has access to, or information about the accessibility
> of, Foucault's introduction to Kant's _Anthropology_. Is it in fact only
> available in typescript at the library of the Sorbonne?
>
> I'm also interested in Foucault's literary criticism from 1962-1966, some
> of which has been translated into English. But the following have not,
> and I'm wondering if anyone out there has or knows about any rough-and-ready
> translations of:
> "Un si cruel savoir," _Critique_ 182 (1962), 597-611
> "Distance, aspect, origine," _Critique_ 198 (1963), 931-945
> "Le langage de l'espace," _Critique_ 203 (1964), 378-382
> "La folie, l'abscence d'oeuvre," _La Table Ronde_ 196 (1964), 11-21
> "Le Mallarme de J.-P. Richard," _Annales_ 19/5 (1964), 996-1004
>
> Feel free to respond to the list or by backchannelling directly to me.
>
> Much obliged,
> Tom Orange
> London, Ontario
>
>
>
------------------
Concerning F's introduction to K's Anthropologie, _dits et
ecrits_ has the following information to offer:
"En 1961, MF presente comme these complementaire pour l'obtention
de doctorat es lettres une traduction annotee, de 347 pages,
d'Anthropologie in pragmatischer Hinsichtabgefasst, d'EK, precedee d'une
introduction de 128 pages. L'ensemble est conserve sours forme
dactylographiee par la bibliotheque de la Sorbonne. F ne publia que la
traduction precedee de cette "notice historique."
In good old English:
"In 1961, MF present[ed] a 347-page annotated translation of EK's
Anthropology preceeded by a 128-page introduction as [part of the
requirements for his doctoral degree]. The work in its entirety is kept
in type-written form at the library of the Sorbonne. F only published
the translation and this "historical notice."
The historical notice is text #19 in _dits et ecrits_. Send me a
message if you need the French text; I would not mind at all sending it
to you via snail. (I've just entered some 10 pages of text from this
book and don't think I could stand doing another one).
sincerely,
dda
On Fri, 15 Mar 1996, Thomas M. Orange wrote:
> Listmembers:
>
> Wondering if anyone has access to, or information about the accessibility
> of, Foucault's introduction to Kant's _Anthropology_. Is it in fact only
> available in typescript at the library of the Sorbonne?
>
> I'm also interested in Foucault's literary criticism from 1962-1966, some
> of which has been translated into English. But the following have not,
> and I'm wondering if anyone out there has or knows about any rough-and-ready
> translations of:
> "Un si cruel savoir," _Critique_ 182 (1962), 597-611
> "Distance, aspect, origine," _Critique_ 198 (1963), 931-945
> "Le langage de l'espace," _Critique_ 203 (1964), 378-382
> "La folie, l'abscence d'oeuvre," _La Table Ronde_ 196 (1964), 11-21
> "Le Mallarme de J.-P. Richard," _Annales_ 19/5 (1964), 996-1004
>
> Feel free to respond to the list or by backchannelling directly to me.
>
> Much obliged,
> Tom Orange
> London, Ontario
>
>
>
------------------