Dear George,
If you're really being thorough, Derrida revisits the "debate" much later (after Foucault's death) in _Resistances of Psychoanalysis_, (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1998 [1996]). He does in any way address the charges Foucault made in "My Body, This Paper, This Fire", but only quotes Foucault selectively to show that he held a special place for Freud outside of the history of madness.
-Nate
At 04:44 PM 3/20/2005, you wrote:
If you're really being thorough, Derrida revisits the "debate" much later (after Foucault's death) in _Resistances of Psychoanalysis_, (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1998 [1996]). He does in any way address the charges Foucault made in "My Body, This Paper, This Fire", but only quotes Foucault selectively to show that he held a special place for Freud outside of the history of madness.
-Nate
At 04:44 PM 3/20/2005, you wrote:
Hello dear colleagues/people
I have a quation concrning a working/research thing i am on: Madness as the limit of Reason. I have worked on the whole debate of Foucault-Derrida and have seen a book by Boyne on this.
The question is wheather anyone knows additional bibliography concerning Nietzche's Madness as the limit of Our/His Reason.
Thank you in advance
George I Giannakopoulos
Athens, greece
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