Hi all,
the french word seems to be used for example in "Oeuvres de D'Alembert"
(1821), tome 1, page 22: "un assujétissement réciproque".
best regards,
Teemu
On Wed, Jun 18, 2008 at 1:47 AM, Jason Weidner <jas_weidner@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
>
> Does anyone know, is the word "assujetissement" a Foucauldian neologism or
> did the word already exists before Foucault used it?
>
> Jason R. Weidner
> PhD. candidate, Department of International Relations
> Florida International University
> Miami, FL USA
> _______________________________________________
> Foucault-L mailing list
>
the french word seems to be used for example in "Oeuvres de D'Alembert"
(1821), tome 1, page 22: "un assujétissement réciproque".
best regards,
Teemu
On Wed, Jun 18, 2008 at 1:47 AM, Jason Weidner <jas_weidner@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
>
> Does anyone know, is the word "assujetissement" a Foucauldian neologism or
> did the word already exists before Foucault used it?
>
> Jason R. Weidner
> PhD. candidate, Department of International Relations
> Florida International University
> Miami, FL USA
> _______________________________________________
> Foucault-L mailing list
>