Late in life, Foucault identified with “the critical tradition of Kant,” encouraging us to read both thinkers in new ways. Kant’s “Copernican” strategy of grounding knowledge in the limits of human reason proved to stabilize political, social-scientific, and medical expertise as well as philosophical discourse. These inevitable limits were made concrete in historical structures such as the asylum, the prison, and the sexual or racial human body. Such institutions built upon and shaped the aesthetic judgment of those considered “normal.”Following Kant through all of Foucault’s major works, this book shows how bodies functioned as “problematic objects” in which the limits of post-Enlightenment European power and discourse were imaginatively figured and unified. It suggests ways that readers in a neoliberal political order can detach from the imaginative schemes vested in their bodies and experiment normatively with their own security needs.
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ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Imagination and ProblematizationPart 1: The Political Topology of Kantian Reason Drawing the Boundaries of Pure Reason Transcendental and Other Topographies The Quest for Unity Discursivity and Materiality The Virtues of Communicability The Kantian Body—Missing in ActionPart 2: Man and His Doubles: Two Ways to Problematize Heterotopia and the Phenomenological World In the Field of the Problematic Object The Man-Form: Empirical and Transcendental Materiality and Resemblance: Statements Materiality and Resemblance: Bodies An-aesthetic philosophy?Part 3: Locked in the Market From Raison d’État to Phobie d’État Migration of Sovereignty The Normal and the Normative Crisis in Liberalism Negative AnthropologyAfterword: Not Similar to Something, Just SimilarReferencesIndex
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“This thought-provoking work on Foucault reads him against a Kantian background—replacing transcendental critique with genealogical critique. Locating Kant’s critical standpoint in a resistance to being dominated by such problematic limits as a thing in itself and an infinite subject, Hengehold goes on to explore how Foucault treats madness, sexuality, and delinquency as individual embodied modes of resistance to the limit concepts of the body politic. This book will be of interest to readers in contemporary philosophy, aesthetics, feminism, critical theory, and the social sciences.”—Rudolf A. Makkreel,Emory University
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780271032122
Publisert
2010-09-15
Utgiver
Vendor
Pennsylvania State University Press
Vekt
513 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
24 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
336

Forfatter

Biographical note

Laura Hengehold is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Case Western Reserve University.