Contemporary European thought A: Deleuze and Foucault
Claire Colebrook
8 points
* 2 hours per week
* Second semester
* Clayton
Objectives This course aims to introduce students to a careful reading of selected texts of two recent French philosophers, Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze, who have been singly and jointly theorised the nexus between desire and power.
Synopsis. The course is divided into three parts: in the first, the common cultural and theoretical background of French philosophy in the twentieth century (through vitalism, structuralism, phenomenology, existentialism, psychoanalysis and Marxism) will be briefly surveyed to contextualise the writings of Foucault. In the second part we examine those he derides as `genealogy', his writings on prisons and disciplinary power; and his writings on the history of sexuality. In the third we will look at Deleuze's `rhizomatic writings', concentrating on Nietzsche, Sacher van Masoh and `A thousand plateaus'.
Assessment Written (6000 words): 100%
* Option of a 3000-word essay
and a 3-hour examination
Published by Monash University, Clayton, Victoria
3168 Copyright © Monash University 1996 - All Rights Reserved - Caution Authorised by the Academic Registrar December 1996 |