ABSTRACT

"What is the pervasive character of the world? The answer is force. But, as Heidegger asks next: ""What is force?"" Connors sets out to answer this question, tracing a genealogy of the idea of force through the writings of Nietzsche, Heidegger, Foucault and Derrida. These thinkers try to pin down what force is, but know too that it is something which cannot be neutrally described. Their vigorously literary writings must therefore be read as much for the stylistic and rhetorical ways in which they render force's powerful elusiveness as for the content of their arguments. And it is perhaps literature, rather than philosophy, which best engages with force. Certainly, for Connors, these philosophical positions are foreshadowed in remarkable detail by Shakespeare's Henry V - a play shot through with forces, imaginary, military, rhetorical and bodily."

chapter |14 pages

Introducing Force

chapter 1|30 pages

Nietzsche: Force and Will

chapter 2|28 pages

Heidegger: Force and Forcelessness

chapter 3|29 pages

Foucault: Force, Power, and History

chapter 4|26 pages

Derrida: Force and Impossibility

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion

Crooked Figures and Imaginary Forces