Doug,
What which?
I am looking at the way people like Judith Butler have used Foucaultian
critique to pursue questions of subjectification and the political
circumstances that arise. I don't know that this line of inquiry is
possible without
Marx, or the post-marxist work of the Frankfurt School, (Adorno & Habermas
in particular), but I don't think that I can be reduced to Marx or
exhausted through a Marxian vocabulary.
On Mon, 20 Jul 1998, Doug Henwood wrote:
> Joanna L. Crosby wrote:
>
> >While I am intersted in Marxist influences in Foucault's work, the more
> >productive line of thought seems to me to ask how Foucault takes us beyond
> >Marx.
>
> Which is where?
>
> Doug
>
>
>
>
What which?
I am looking at the way people like Judith Butler have used Foucaultian
critique to pursue questions of subjectification and the political
circumstances that arise. I don't know that this line of inquiry is
possible without
Marx, or the post-marxist work of the Frankfurt School, (Adorno & Habermas
in particular), but I don't think that I can be reduced to Marx or
exhausted through a Marxian vocabulary.
On Mon, 20 Jul 1998, Doug Henwood wrote:
> Joanna L. Crosby wrote:
>
> >While I am intersted in Marxist influences in Foucault's work, the more
> >productive line of thought seems to me to ask how Foucault takes us beyond
> >Marx.
>
> Which is where?
>
> Doug
>
>
>
>