At several points throughout his career, Foucault suggests that publishing texts without authors’ names attached would be a useful step towards dismantling what he calls the “author-function:” a social and political role structured according to the way discourse is treated and disseminated in a particular social setting. I discuss Foucault’s criticisms of the author-function in terms of its relationship to the political role of intellectuals, and I argue that the demise of this role cannot be achieved through the means of authorial anonymity, as Foucault suggests. Rather, it must be undermined from a position within this role itself
Peer reviewed article. Ingeborg Bachmann is an Austrian author whose last novel Malina was published...
This study examines the constitutive role of the author’s name for a better understanding of literar...
The idea that women in past centuries withheld their names because they experienced their own author...
At several points throughout his career, Foucault suggests that publishing texts without authors’ na...
In this paper, we appraise the thoughts of Foucault on the relationship between the author, work, an...
This analysis of Foucault's ‘What is an Author?’ produces three main findings. First, Foucault was a...
In the course of this essay I wish to reopen the (never fully closed) question of whether it is advi...
The title 'Forgetting Foucault?', minus the question mark (a very important omission, of course), is...
Based on Foucault's exploration of the author-function, the current study investigates knowledge org...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
This article outlines selected shifts in thinking about authorship and authority that have occurred ...
This essay examines recent debate on the status of the author in contemporary literature by means of...
This contribution would like to start from Michel Foucault’s remarks on “the name of the author” and...
This paper examines Foucault's notion of the author function as it pertains to Lars Kepler's bestsel...
In the essay, ‘What is an author?’, Michel Foucault (1984, pp. 118– 119) contended that ‘the author ...
Peer reviewed article. Ingeborg Bachmann is an Austrian author whose last novel Malina was published...
This study examines the constitutive role of the author’s name for a better understanding of literar...
The idea that women in past centuries withheld their names because they experienced their own author...
At several points throughout his career, Foucault suggests that publishing texts without authors’ na...
In this paper, we appraise the thoughts of Foucault on the relationship between the author, work, an...
This analysis of Foucault's ‘What is an Author?’ produces three main findings. First, Foucault was a...
In the course of this essay I wish to reopen the (never fully closed) question of whether it is advi...
The title 'Forgetting Foucault?', minus the question mark (a very important omission, of course), is...
Based on Foucault's exploration of the author-function, the current study investigates knowledge org...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
This article outlines selected shifts in thinking about authorship and authority that have occurred ...
This essay examines recent debate on the status of the author in contemporary literature by means of...
This contribution would like to start from Michel Foucault’s remarks on “the name of the author” and...
This paper examines Foucault's notion of the author function as it pertains to Lars Kepler's bestsel...
In the essay, ‘What is an author?’, Michel Foucault (1984, pp. 118– 119) contended that ‘the author ...
Peer reviewed article. Ingeborg Bachmann is an Austrian author whose last novel Malina was published...
This study examines the constitutive role of the author’s name for a better understanding of literar...
The idea that women in past centuries withheld their names because they experienced their own author...