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Speaking the Truth About Oneself: Lectures at Victoria University, Toronto, 1982

Part of the The Chicago Foucault Project series
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A collection of Foucault's lectures that trace the historical formation and contemporary significance of the hermeneutics of the self.
 
Just before the summer of 1982, French philosopher Michel Foucault gave a series of lectures at Victoria University in Toronto. In these lectures, which were part of his project of writing a genealogy of the modern subject, he is concerned with the care and cultivation of the self, a theme that becomes central to the second, third, and fourth volumes of his History of Sexuality. Throughout his career, Foucault had always been interested in the question of how constellations of knowledge and power produce and shape subjects, and in the last phase of his life, he became especially interested not only in how subjects are formed by these forces, but in how they ethically constitute themselves.

In this lecture series and accompanying seminar, Foucault focuses on antiquity, starting with classical Greece, the early Roman Empire, and concluding with Christian monasticism in the fourth and fifth centuries AD. Foucault traces the development of a new kind of verbal practice-"speaking the truth about oneself"-in which the subject increasingly comes to be defined by its inner thoughts and desires. He deemed this new form of "hermeneutical" subjectivity important not just for historical reasons but also due to its enduring significance in modern society. Is another form of the self possible today?
 

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Product Details
University of Chicago Press
022662305X / 9780226623054
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
194
06/10/2021
280 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%