Using Foucault’s conceptual frame from The Archaeology of Knowledge to read Foucault’s late deployment of “spirituality,” this article argues that Foucault’s enigmatic gesture in using this concept reveals a refusal of “rupture” from the Christian pre-modern discourse of “spirit.” Despite attempts to alter the “field of use,” Foucault’s genealogical commitment ensures a Christian continuity in modern discourses of transformation. In a detailed examination of the 1982 Collège de France lectures, the article returns Foucault’s use of “spirituality” to the Alexandrian joining of philosophy and theology and the specificity of Christian practice and belief
Like all previously published volumes of his lectures, the content of The Government of the Living d...
The 'late' Foucault and his purported 'return to the subject' is a much discussed issue. Over the pa...
Michel Foucault argues that modern scholars have inaccurately conceptualized ancient Greco-Roman phi...
International audienceIn this article I figure how Foucault tried to elaborate tools to think the mo...
Based primarily on his 1981-1982 course, The Hermeneutics of the Subject, I contend that Michel Fouc...
This article rethinks Michel Foucault’s relation to religion by situating his engagement with the ‘d...
This review locates the 1980 lectures within the context of the wider discussions of Foucault and re...
Exploration of the import for theology of the thought of Michel Foucault has been growing steadily i...
In contemporary debates on the so-called “return of religion„ in new forms and practices...
The article is devoted to the historical and philosophical reconstruction of the concepts of experie...
Recently, while rereading some material in The Essential Works of Foucault, I came upon a passage th...
© 2019 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. In contemporary debates on the so-called “r...
In The Government of the Living, Foucault demonstrates elegantly and convincingly the emergence of a...
While Michel Foucault is chiefly known for his historical relativism and his critique of modern inst...
Michel Foucault was well known as an epistemologist, historicist, and historian of thought. His ana...
Like all previously published volumes of his lectures, the content of The Government of the Living d...
The 'late' Foucault and his purported 'return to the subject' is a much discussed issue. Over the pa...
Michel Foucault argues that modern scholars have inaccurately conceptualized ancient Greco-Roman phi...
International audienceIn this article I figure how Foucault tried to elaborate tools to think the mo...
Based primarily on his 1981-1982 course, The Hermeneutics of the Subject, I contend that Michel Fouc...
This article rethinks Michel Foucault’s relation to religion by situating his engagement with the ‘d...
This review locates the 1980 lectures within the context of the wider discussions of Foucault and re...
Exploration of the import for theology of the thought of Michel Foucault has been growing steadily i...
In contemporary debates on the so-called “return of religion„ in new forms and practices...
The article is devoted to the historical and philosophical reconstruction of the concepts of experie...
Recently, while rereading some material in The Essential Works of Foucault, I came upon a passage th...
© 2019 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. In contemporary debates on the so-called “r...
In The Government of the Living, Foucault demonstrates elegantly and convincingly the emergence of a...
While Michel Foucault is chiefly known for his historical relativism and his critique of modern inst...
Michel Foucault was well known as an epistemologist, historicist, and historian of thought. His ana...
Like all previously published volumes of his lectures, the content of The Government of the Living d...
The 'late' Foucault and his purported 'return to the subject' is a much discussed issue. Over the pa...
Michel Foucault argues that modern scholars have inaccurately conceptualized ancient Greco-Roman phi...