This post is just to have some fun rather than anything serious.
I came across this rather funny quote from Zizek on another list and thought it might be fun to rewrite it with Foucault as the end point.
Zizek
If a person renounces Stephen King, soon Hitchcock himself will appear to him dubious, and from here it is just a step to a disdain for psychoanalysis and to a snobbish refusal of Lacan. How many people have entered the way of perdition with some fleeting cynical remark on Stephen King, which at the time was of no great importance to them, and ended by treating Lacan as a phallocentric obscurantist! (Slavoj Zizek. Looking Awry: An Introduction to Jacques Lacan Through Popular Culture. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1991.p. viii)
Here's my Foucault version
If a person renounces 'The Prisoner' [TV series], soon George Orwell himself will appear to him dubious, and from here it is just a step to a disdain for genealogy and to a snobbish refusal of Foucault. How many people have entered the way of perdition with some fleeting cynical remark on 'The Prisoner', which at the time was of no great importance to them, and ended by treating Foucault as a nihilistic postmodernist!
--
regards
Clare
************************************************
Clare O'Farrell
email: c.ofarrell@xxxxxxxxxx
website: http://www.michel-foucault.com
************************************************
I came across this rather funny quote from Zizek on another list and thought it might be fun to rewrite it with Foucault as the end point.
Zizek
If a person renounces Stephen King, soon Hitchcock himself will appear to him dubious, and from here it is just a step to a disdain for psychoanalysis and to a snobbish refusal of Lacan. How many people have entered the way of perdition with some fleeting cynical remark on Stephen King, which at the time was of no great importance to them, and ended by treating Lacan as a phallocentric obscurantist! (Slavoj Zizek. Looking Awry: An Introduction to Jacques Lacan Through Popular Culture. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1991.p. viii)
Here's my Foucault version
If a person renounces 'The Prisoner' [TV series], soon George Orwell himself will appear to him dubious, and from here it is just a step to a disdain for genealogy and to a snobbish refusal of Foucault. How many people have entered the way of perdition with some fleeting cynical remark on 'The Prisoner', which at the time was of no great importance to them, and ended by treating Foucault as a nihilistic postmodernist!
--
regards
Clare
************************************************
Clare O'Farrell
email: c.ofarrell@xxxxxxxxxx
website: http://www.michel-foucault.com
************************************************