> anyone can point me to the best place to learn Foucault's
> views on the self -- what kind of thing it is (and isn't).
> Is there a book, chapter, or article, by Foucault or
> someone else, that summarizes this?
> Bill Clark
>
Foucault's clearest expression of his own views on the self is -- in
my opinion -- in a late interview (January 1984) called "The Ethic of
Care for the Self as a Practice of Freedom." Of course, this
presents Foucault's "late" views on the self, which if nothing else
has a different emphasis than his earlier views. It appears in THE
FINAL FOUCAULT, and (in a different translation) in FOUCAULT LIVE.
A good secondary article on the theme is "Making Up People" by Ian
Hacking, which discusses Foucault a little bit, but is more generally
concerned with articulating a "Foucaultian" account of the so-called
"social construction" of "kinds of person" (e.g., "pervert", "multiple
personality", or "waiter").
Steve D.
> views on the self -- what kind of thing it is (and isn't).
> Is there a book, chapter, or article, by Foucault or
> someone else, that summarizes this?
> Bill Clark
>
Foucault's clearest expression of his own views on the self is -- in
my opinion -- in a late interview (January 1984) called "The Ethic of
Care for the Self as a Practice of Freedom." Of course, this
presents Foucault's "late" views on the self, which if nothing else
has a different emphasis than his earlier views. It appears in THE
FINAL FOUCAULT, and (in a different translation) in FOUCAULT LIVE.
A good secondary article on the theme is "Making Up People" by Ian
Hacking, which discusses Foucault a little bit, but is more generally
concerned with articulating a "Foucaultian" account of the so-called
"social construction" of "kinds of person" (e.g., "pervert", "multiple
personality", or "waiter").
Steve D.