One of the most influential contemporary thinkers, Michel Foucault produced a complex body of work across a wide range of academic disciplines. Foucault and Philosophy presents a collection of thought provoking essays that explore Foucault's writings as a philosopher -- both in relation to philosophers who were important to him and in the context of a range of significant themes and areas of dispute in contemporary philosophy. Foucault's personal philosophical development and his contributions to a broader field of philosophical reflection are revealed through a series of thematically arranged contributions from an international cast of distinguished philosophers and leading Foucault scholars. Foucault's philosophical development is first traced through essays that place him in the context of his relationship to ancient philosophy, phenomenology, Marxism, structuralism; and to figures such as Kant, Heidegger, Nietzsche, Habermas, and others. Further essays then evaluate the major contribution of Foucault's thought to some of the central philosophical problems of our time, including freedom, knowledge, subjectivity, ethics, power, and the nature of philosophy itself. With the 25th anniversary of Foucault's death upon us, Foucault and Philosophy offers a timely and invaluable scholarly reconsideration of the philosophical development and legacy of a controversial and iconic figure of 20th-century thought.
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"Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates throughresearchers/faculty." (Choice, 1 August 2011)
"In sum, then, O'Leary and Falzon have brought together a goodand interesting set of essays that are well worth reading. Thisvolume will be of interest to all scholars who work with Foucault'stexts and might be recommended to advanced undergraduate students."(Notre Dame, 22 March 2011)
"As a whole the volume on Foucault's relation to philosophy is afascinating contribution to the vast literature on his work.Although the papers within the volume were somewhat short, theyopen up many divergent areas of potential research for the future."(Metapsychology Online, January 2011)"Was it important that Michel Foucault thought philosophically?That among his major partners in reflection were Kant, Hegel,Nietzsche, Heidegger and Habermas? That Foucault's experiments inthought intersected with analyses of subjectivity, theories ofknowledge, philosophies of experience? The outstandingcontributions to this volume respond to these questions by leadingits readers into an excavation of Foucault's philosophicalcuriosity and his unfinished road map to the good life."
--James Bernauer, Boston College
"In sum, then, O'Leary and Falzon have brought together a goodand interesting set of essays that are well worth reading. Thisvolume will be of interest to all scholars who work with Foucault'stexts and might be recommended to advanced undergraduate students."(Notre Dame, 22 March 2011)
"As a whole the volume on Foucault's relation to philosophy is afascinating contribution to the vast literature on his work.Although the papers within the volume were somewhat short, theyopen up many divergent areas of potential research for the future."(Metapsychology Online, January 2011)"Was it important that Michel Foucault thought philosophically?That among his major partners in reflection were Kant, Hegel,Nietzsche, Heidegger and Habermas? That Foucault's experiments inthought intersected with analyses of subjectivity, theories ofknowledge, philosophies of experience? The outstandingcontributions to this volume respond to these questions by leadingits readers into an excavation of Foucault's philosophicalcuriosity and his unfinished road map to the good life."
--James Bernauer, Boston College