Reading After Foucault: Institutions, Disciplines, and Technologies of the Self in Germany, 1750-1830Robert Scott Leventhal "The volume reads "after" Foucault in a number of ways. First, the readings occur after his decisive insights into the archive, the statement, discourse, and the pivotal function of the institutional and disciplinary conditions of their possibility. Second, the readings operate under the assumptions of discourse-analytical procedure; they seek to articulate at a discursive level, the fissures and breaks inherent within discourses and writing systems. Third, the readings attempt to work through the problematics of texts, statements, and circuits of communication and to unfold the discursive preconditions of specific forms of writing and self-production. Finally, Reading After Foucault seeks to contribute to a "history of the present" by analyzing the networks in and through which literary modernity has been manufactured. New readings of Wezel, Kleist, Reinhold, Herder, Schiller, Campe, Goethe, the story of Kaspar Hauser, Holderlin, Hamann, and Novalis are featured."--BOOK JACKET. |
From inside the book
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Contents
Concerning Several Formulae of Communication in Hölderlin | |
Schillers Naive and Sentimental | 15 |
Novaliss Heinrich | |
The Confessions of Werther | 17 |
261 | 17 |
Common terms and phrases
Aarsleff aesthetic archaeology autobiographical becomes Berlin Campe Campe's communication concept critique culture death defined discipline discourse dream eighteenth century Elisabeth emergence Empfindsamkeit enigma Enlightenment essay fictional Freud Friedrich Friedrich Kittler Friedrich Schlegel G. W. F. Hegel German Goethe Goethe's Hamann Hegel Heinrich Herder Herder's text hermeneuticians hermeneutics Herrmann Hölderlin human Hyperion Ian Hacking ideas individual institution interpretation J. G. Hamann Johann Johann Georg Hamann Kant Kant's Kaspar Hauser Kleist language letter linguistic literary literature Maria meaning Michel Foucault modern mother murder N&SP naive narration narrative nature Novalis novel object performative philology philosophy play poetry poets precisely question reading reason representation rhetoric Rivière Rivière's memoir Romantic scene Schiller Schleiermacher sense sentence sentimental Sentimental's sexuality social society speaking specific speech speech-act sublime suicide note theory thought tion Ulrike University Press Werke Werther Wezel Wissenschaft words writing York