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PostPosted: Thu Nov 19, 2009 5:57 pm 
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Statius- Thebaid


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 20, 2009 8:36 am 
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traptunderice wrote:
rio wrote:
Going to read up on Foucault as it turns out I'm going to be leading seminars on him over the next couple of weeks :omfg:

And I don't really know much about him at all... time for some revision.
Quote:
foucault essentially asks: how is nietzsche's ubermensch possible within the world of heidegger's enframing (ge-stell) which alienates (pace hegel / feuerbach / marx) us from ourselves (as "dasein")? rolling eyes

foucault's project:

homoerotic "care of self" as resistance to the discipline-effects of norm / deviance structures generated by systems of institutions (e.g. clinic, prison, asylum, school, factory, etc) which constitute a well-regulated, panoptically administered (bourgeois) 'society'; the development of these norm / deviance structures (aka epistemes) can be approximately recovered as layers / strata via an archeological method; and resistances to the discipline-effects of norm / deviance structures can be historicized via a genealogical method which interprets practices & accounts of "desire" as a hermeneutics of subjectivity; both methods applied concurrently can inform ad hoc, decentralized, local strategies of opposition by uncovering temporarily accessible fissures in the regimes & apparatuses of social control.

this is what i take from foucault (sans jargon & rhetoric), but certaintly it's not all there is. as far as i'm concerned his project begins with "a politics of subversion" (radical relativism) and culminates in "an ethics of desire-as-transgression" (polymorphic perversity) as opposition to authoritarian mentalities (e.g. fascism, puritanism, legalism, scientism, etc).

Foucault says that it is indeed futile to expect a complete revolution which will make everything perfect. All systems are dangerous because all systems have an inherent repressive element. But at the same time all systems have pockets of resistance to the system. These are driven by an untheoretic awareness of there being something wrong ('intolerable', he once said).

He primarily attacks those philosophers who believe that truth and science will help liberation, by showing how those very sentiments have led us to be less free in certain respects (or at least have led to some people, the outsiders, to be less free).
I found this off a philosophy forum a while back. So what aspect of his thought are you focusing on? The genealogical method, revolutionary prospects, the panopticon and control, sexuality and the formation of knowledge, the scientific/medical/male gaze? My two professors at community college were Foucault experts so I was given a solid dose of it.


The panopticon and control is the focus. It's for this "sociology of work" module, and we're discussing how hierarchies at work "manufacture consent" by making people view very intrusive control methods (i.e. making people force themselves to find dull work interesting, making them reorientate their social lives to one more acceptable to their bosses) appear to people as pragmatic decisions for getting ahead in their career. Very interesting stuff, really. So long as I can remain a few steps ahead of the students it will be fine.


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PostPosted: Sat Nov 21, 2009 9:47 pm 
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Sounds super actually. The Panopticon and the internalized gaze isn't too hard of a concept. I've never actually heard it being utilized in that way but it definitely fits. My favorite example of the internalized gaze is how women internalize beauty standards a la Sandra Bartky.


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 25, 2009 11:37 am 
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Book sale in the college library:

-A book about myths and legends from the middle ages (both original texts and translation into Dutch)
-Walter Besant- The world went very well (1887)
-H.G. Wells- Ann Veronica
-Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island (1929)
-W.M. Thackeray- Henry Esmond (1902)

Didn't spend 20€ on them all :P


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 25, 2009 11:54 am 
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Reading my way through "The Human Body - Anatomy and Physiology" rather sluggishly. Don't have time to read anything else up until the exams. Interesting stuff though, I've been digging into some brain-anatomy and functionality lately, incredible stuff.


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 25, 2009 12:05 pm 
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girlfriend loaned me One Hundred Years of Solitude, first 'personal' reading i'll be doing in ages. even on the train and on the toilet i find myself reading fucking case studies *facepalm*

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 26, 2009 4:48 am 
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Jorge Luis Borgez- Ficciones


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 26, 2009 10:50 am 
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Thomas Harris-esque serial killer hunt set in 19th Century New York. Pretty good so far, looks like Albert Fish was a reference for the author and that mad old twat always freaks me out a little, so good stuff.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 26, 2009 10:51 am 
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Virginia Woolf - A Room Of One's Own

Let's see if it's any good.

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PostPosted: Mon Nov 30, 2009 6:53 pm 
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sister got me Ken Follet's "Hornet Flight", is it any good? it's a thriller, which he usually writes, but he's most famous for Pillars of the Earth so i dunno whether i should trade it in for something else.

picked up "The Ascent of Money - A Financial History of the World" by Niall Ferguson at the airport. 60 pages in, liking it so far.

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Last edited by Azrael on Tue Dec 01, 2009 12:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 1:31 am 
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Albert Camus The Plague
Sondra Bartky Femininity and Domination, Studies in the Phenomenology of Oppression (some light reading with applications of Fanon, Marx and Foucault to feminism)
Daniel Little Scientific Marx (what a clusterfuck)


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PostPosted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 1:03 am 
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Brahm_K wrote:
Jorge Luis Borgez- Ficciones


YES

This man is a fucking genius. Honestly, no matter how smart you think you are, there's no way you're getting all the meaning that is layered under those stories.


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PostPosted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 1:45 am 
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I'm almost done with Breakfast of Champions. If actually sat down and read it for a while I'd finish it in no time, but this hasn't happened in a while for whatever reason.

After that, it's up in the air between Mona Lisa Overdrive, Hyperion, A Demon Haunted World, Fellowship of the Ring or From Hell.


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PostPosted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 5:59 am 
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heatseeker wrote:
Brahm_K wrote:
Jorge Luis Borgez- Ficciones


YES

This man is a fucking genius. Honestly, no matter how smart you think you are, there's no way you're getting all the meaning that is layered under those stories.


Ha, I've already realized this. I've also realized that it was a mistake to start reading him during exam period. This is one of those books I'm going to need so sit down with when I have a lot of time, not that I can read for 20 minutes before sleeping.


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 10:46 pm 
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Finally finished Zizek - In Defence of Lost Causes.


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 11:32 pm 
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Any recommendations for "smart" pleasure reading after exams are done? I want some stuff that's enjoyable to read but still good lit. Thanks...


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 07, 2009 11:37 pm 
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hmm... how about Zola - Germinal


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PostPosted: Tue Dec 08, 2009 1:27 am 
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rio wrote:
hmm... how about Zola - Germinal
Nice! I love that book minus the French naturalist writing style. You got the anarchist, the labor advocate, and the people who just want to survive.

I'm stopped on about page 80 of Lost Causes. I always pick it up at the worst possible times.

Anyways, I'm now digging through Maggie Little's essay Seeing and Caring: The Role of Affect In Feminist Moral Epistemology. It's interesting and it's fun because it teabags Western philosophy and ethics since Kant and Hegel.


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 6:49 am 
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Mark Poster - Sartre's Marxism

I figured a good intro to Sartre's Critique of Dialectical Reason would be good before my 2000 page set of volume 1 and 2 arrived in January. So in one way Sartre seems to be pissing on Marx by reformulating a lot of his main concepts but in another way he seems to be rejuvenating 1959-60ish Marxism by trying to address a lot of the problems Marxism was dealing with before the 60s resurgence. And in doing that he is pulling Marxism out of a critique of labor and making it a critique of societal relations. Either way, he definitely pissed on the readers with his dense writing style and overuse of fabricated words like alterity, seriality and practico-inert, to just name a few.


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 14, 2009 10:22 pm 
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How Nonviolence Protects the State- Peter Gelderloos

Wow, a pretty solid argument that our Western centric viewpoint makes us think that nonviolence actually works when what really works is terrorism and rioting and uprising. Gelderloos isn't advocating those methods for every case but recognizes that they can be necessary alternatives in a diverse array of tactics.


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