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Page "Michel Foucault" ¶ 43
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is and Foucault's
Foucault's author function is the idea that an author exists only as a function of a written work, a part of its structure, but not necessarily part of the interpretive process.
Expanding upon Foucault's position, Alexander Nehamas writes that Foucault suggests " an author [...] is whoever can be understood to have produced a particular text as we interpret it ", not necessarily who penned the text.
Foucault's interpretation of governance is also very important in constructing theories of transnational power structure.
Michel Foucault's concept of discourse is closely related to social rules as it offers a possible explanation how these rules are shaped and change.
For example, Michel Foucault's Madness and Civilization is both a history and an inspection of cultural attitudes about madness.
Foucault's relation to Heidegger is a matter of considerable difficulty ; Foucault acknowledged Heidegger as a philosopher whom he read but never wrote about.
The novel is mentioned at the very end of Michel Foucault's Life of infamous men.
The more common attempts to bracket out Foucault's writings on Iran as " miscalculations ," reminds some authors of what Foucault himself had criticized in his well known 1969 essay, " What is an Author?
Foucault's first biographer, Didier Eribon, described the philosopher as " a complex, many-sided character ", and that " under one mask there is always another ".
Foucault's relation to structuralism is ambiguous.
The book is among Foucault's most successful and influential works.
The volume was almost complete before Foucault's death and a copy of it is privately held in the Foucault archive.
This is one of the ways that Foucault's work is linked to critical theory.
Philosopher Richard Rorty has argued that Foucault's ' archaeology of knowledge ' is fundamentally negative, and thus fails to adequately establish any ' new ' theory of knowledge per se.
In the northwest corner of the cathedral grounds is Copernicus ' tower, and in the southwest corner an octagonal building with a square bell tower and a small planetarium and a Foucault's pendulum.
The Foucault pendulum ( ), or Foucault's pendulum, named after the French physicist Léon Foucault, is a simple device conceived as an experiment to demonstrate the rotation of the Earth.
Foucault's ' episteme ' is too narrow and abstract, not social enough.
Michel Foucault's use of ' technologies of discourse ' and ' mechanisms of power ' describes how deliberation is either foreclosed or is a product of a series of technologies of discourse which produce a semblance of agency through the reproductions of power as they occur between individual subjects.
* Cagliostro is frequently alluded to in Umberto Eco's novel Foucault's Pendulum.
This displacement of discourse constitutes one of the bases of Foucault's thought: discourse is not tied to the subject, rather the " subject " is a construction of discourse.
* In Umberto Eco's novel Foucault's Pendulum, Alamut is described in detail towards the end of the novel.

is and only
Bryn Mawr Drive is only two or three miles from the Spartan, and it took me less than five minutes to get there.
Actually, only two men know what the formula is, Blake and '' -- He stopped and looked at Thor's body.
In fact it has caused us to give serious thought to moving our residence south, because it is not easy for the most objective Southerner to sit calmly by when his host is telling a roomful of people that the only way to deal with Southerners who oppose integration is to send in troops and shoot the bastards down.
This is the only case in modern history of a people of Britannic origin submitting without continued struggle to what they view as foreign domination.
Recognizing that the Rule of Law is `` a dynamic concept which should be employed not only to safeguard the civil and political rights of the individual in a free society '', the Congress asserted that it also included the responsibility `` to establish social, economic, educational and cultural conditions under which his legitimate aspirations and dignity may be realized ''.
It is the gait of the human who must run to live: arms dangling, legs barely swinging over the ground, head hung down and only occasionally swinging up to see the target, a loose motion that is just short of stumbling and yet is wonderfully graceful.
They are huge areas which have been swept by winds for so many centuries that there is no soil left, but only deep bare ridges fifty or sixty yards apart with ravines between them thirty or forty feet deep and the only thing that moves is a scuttling layer of sand.
Others are confined to vast reservations, and not only does the Australian government justifiably not wish them to be viewed as exhibits in a zoo, but on their reservations they are extremely fugitive, shunning camps, coming together only for corroborees at which their strange culture comes to its highest pitch -- which is very low indeed.
`` Now that Bruno Walter is virtually in retirement and my dear friend Dimitri Mitropoulos is no longer with us, I am probably the only one -- with the possible exception of Leonard Bernstein -- who has this special affinity for and champions the works of Bruckner and Mahler ''.
Thus, there is freshness not only in the individual movements of the dance but in the shape of their continuity as well.
The answers derived by these means may determine not only the temporal organization of the dance but also its spatial design, special slips designating the location on the stage where the movement is to be performed.
I think it is essential, however, to pinpoint here the difference between the two concepts of sovereignty that went to war in 1861 -- if only to see better how imperative is our need today to clarify completely our far worse confusion on this subject.
To my knowledge, Lincoln remains the only Head of State and Commander-in-Chief who, while fighting a fearful war whose issue was in doubt, proved man enough to say this publicly -- to give his foe the benefit of the fact that in all human truth there is some error, and in all our error, some truth.
It is all around us and our only chance now is to let it in.

is and book-length
Freitas is authoring the multi-volume text Nanomedicine, the first book-length technical discussion of the potential medical applications of hypothetical molecular nanotechnology and medical nanorobotics.
The Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus ( Latin for " Logical-Philosophical Treatise ") is the only book-length philosophical work published by the Austrian philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein in his lifetime.
The presentation of Sherman in popular culture is now discussed at book-length in Sherman's March in Myth and Memory ( Rowman and Littlefield, 2008 ), by Edward Caudill and Paul Ashdown.
( This journal-length article is a translated condensation of Švehla's book-length study Deburau, nieśmiertelny Pierrot Melantrich, 1976.
In a recent book-length study, keyboardist and Bach scholar Peter Williams contends that the Forkel story is entirely spurious.
James wrote many valuable critical articles on other novelists ; typical is his insightful book-length study of his American predecessor Nathaniel Hawthorne.
The White Goddess: a Historical Grammar of Poetic Myth is a book-length essay on the nature of poetic myth-making by author and poet Robert Graves.
Mannington is the model for the fictional town of Grantville in Eric Flint's best selling hit 1632 series of alternate history novels: 1632, 1633, Ring of Fire, The Grantville Gazette, and other book-length and shorter works.
His last book-length work, Way To Bright Star is a picaresque novel set during the Civil War.
the only book-length biography, is by an author who was not a biologist.
There is a book-length review of satellite radiometers.
David Jones ' war poem In Parenthesis was a book-length work that drew on the matter of Britain to illuminate his experiences in the trenches, and his later epic The Anathemata, itself hewn from a much longer manuscript, is a meditation on empire and resistance, the local and the global, which uses materials from Christian, Roman and Celtic history and mythology.
The latter is notable for the book-length " Annals of Europe and America ," Brown's contemporary historical narrative of Napoleonic geopolitics.
The only book-length treatment of the Parnassus plays is Paula Glatzer's The Complaint of the Poet: The Parnassus Plays published in 1977.
Benét is best known for his book-length narrative poem of the American Civil War, John Brown's Body ( 1928 ), for which he won a Pulitzer Prize in 1929, and for two short stories, " The Devil and Daniel Webster " ( 1936 ) and " By the Waters of Babylon " ( 1937 ).
Zioncheck is the subject of an unpublished book-length poem by Grant Cogswell, entitled Ode to Congressman Marion Zioncheck.
* Ketjak is a book-length poem by Ron Silliman published in 1978 and reprinted in The Age of Huts ( 2007 ), in which the author gives the title " Ketjak " to a vast ongoing cycle of works which includes Tjanting ( 1980 ) and The Alphabet ( 2008 ).
Samuel R. Delany's The American Shore ( 1978 ) is a book-length critical essay on the novella " Angouleme "; Delany argues that despite the lack of any scientific themes in " Angouleme ", its speculative setting makes it inherently science fiction.
Attributional style ( or explanatory style ) is a concept introduced by Lyn Yvonne Abramson, Martin Seligman and John D. Teasdale ; Buchanan and Seligman ( 1995 ) have edited a book-length review of the topic.
The Rebel ( French title: L ' Homme révolté ) is a 1951 book-length essay by Albert Camus, which treats both the metaphysical and the historical development of rebellion and revolution in societies, especially Western Europe.
" The $ 1, 000 grant and award competition, open to book-length works, is judged on “ effectiveness of research, accuracy of statement, and excellence of style .” The Cooke Fiction Award is one of three literary prizes given annually by the Military Order of the Stars and Bars.
This is the only book-length study of this singular building, features the architect ’ s own original sketches and plans for its design as well as Hélène Binet ’ s striking photographs of the structure.
( This journal-length article is a translated condensation of Švehla ’ s book-length study Deburau, nieśmiertelny Pierrot Melantrich, 1976.

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