ABSTRACT

Both as historian and maker of culture, Foucault infused numerous disciplines of study with a new conceptual vocabulary and an agenda for future research. His ideas have called central assumptions in Western culture into question and altered the ways in which scholars and social scientists approach such issues as discourse theory, theory of knowledge, Eros, technologies of the Self and Other, punishment and prisons, and asylums and madness.The contributors to this volume indicate Foucault's achievements and the suggestive power of his work, as well as his methodological weaknesses, historical inaccuracies, and ambiguities. Above all, they attempt to show how one can use Foucault to go beyond him in opening new approaches to cultural history. Though comprehensiveness was not attempted, their essays broach the major controversial aspects of Foucauldian cultural history--the position of the subject, the fusion of power and knowledge, sexuality, the historical structures and changes--and they explicitly analyze them with respect to antiquity, the Renaissance, and the nineteenth century.In this collection, Neubauer presents analyses by historians, literary scholars, and philosophers of the entire, transdisciplinary range of Foucault's oeuvre, emphasizing the rich suggestiveness of its agenda. The breadth of the undertaking makes it suitable for seminars and graduate courses in numerous departments.

part I|80 pages

Modes of the Subject in Cultural History

chapter 1|34 pages

No Sex Please, We’re American

Erotophobia, Liberation, and Cultural History

chapter 4|18 pages

Power and Political Spirituality

Michel Foucault on the Islamic Revolution in Iran

part II|80 pages

Modes of Doing Cultural History

chapter 5|18 pages

Foucault Reformed by Certeau

Historical Strategies of Discipline and Everyday Tactics of Appropriation

chapter 6|20 pages

Answering Foucault

Notes on Modes of Order in the Cultural World and the Making of History

chapter 7|12 pages

Foucault’s Shells, Freud’s Symptoms

Towards a Psychoanalytic Conception of Cultural History

chapter 8|28 pages

Reading/Writing/Killing

Foucault, Cultural History and the French Revolution

part III|68 pages

Modes of Conceptualizing Cultural History

chapter 9|14 pages

The Process of Intellectual Change

A Post-Foucauldian Hypothesis

chapter 12|12 pages

Foucault in Gay America

Sexuality at Plymouth Plantation

chapter 13|8 pages

Philosophy in the Filigree of Power

The Limits of an Immanent Critique 1