by Arnold I . Davidson (Editor), Graham Burchell (Translator), M . Foucault (Author)
With these lectures Foucault inaugurates his investigations of truth-telling in the ethical domain of practices of techniques of the self. How and why, he asks, does the government of men require those subject to power to be subjects who must tell the truth about themselves?
Format: Paperback
Pages: 384
Edition: 1st ed. 2014
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Published: 14 Jan 2014
ISBN 10: 1349540994
ISBN 13: 9781349540990
Book Overview: Springer Book Archives
It shows us Foucault in 1980 mapping out a major new phase in his work in terms that complicate our existing understanding of his unfinished project. ... the volume editor, Michel Senellart and the translator, Graham Burchell have done an outstanding job in delivering this work to us in a form that perfectly serves its intent and its content. (Colin Gordon, Foucault Studies, Issue 20, December, 2015)
[Foucault] must be reckoned with. The New York Times Book Review
Ideas spark off nearly every page of this book, as Foucault manages to reinvigorate questions of power and violence that might have seemed well-worn. The words may have been spoken in 1976, but they seem as alive and relevant as if they had been written yesterday. Bookforum
Foucault is quite central to our sense of where we are... The Nation
[Foucault] has an alert and sensitive mind that can ignore the familiar surfaces of established intellectual coded and ask new questions...[He] gives dramatic quality to the movement of culture. The New York Review of BooksThese lectures offer important insights into the evolution of the primary focus of Foucault's later work the relationship
between power and knowledge. - Library Journal