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Poetics Today ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 471-499
Author(s):  
Ryan Devitt

Abstract The article argues for the renewed relevance of Foucault's early essays on literature, written throughout the 1960s, given a return to anthropological reflection in so much literary theory today (especially through affect theory and “new” phenomenologies—both of which rely on older categories supplied by psychoanalysis). On one hand, Foucault reminds us of all the “warped and twisted forms of reflection” that arise from anthropological thought, with its assumptions regarding the “unthought” and the hidden structures of sense and perception. This same Foucault, on the other hand, is deeply engaged with literature; his writings on a range of authors—from Homer and Cervantes, to Friedrich Hölderlin and the Marquis de Sade, to Georges Bataille and Maurice Blanchot—constitute nothing less than an oeuvre. And yet, despite proposals to move beyond Foucauldian critique and its orthodoxy in literary studies today, hardly anything has been thought or said about this body of work in which Foucault, as David Carroll points out, “has the most to say about literature and language.” This lacuna is all the more surprising, since Foucault's early essays offer a rich and fruitful understanding of the being of literature as more than a limpid reflection of the body. In his reading of Bataille and Blanchot in particular, Foucault offers a unique vision of literature that is neither suspicious nor negative but that, in connection with his well-known critique of finitude, culminates in a hopeful call for openness.


Author(s):  
Stephen R. Wilk

French Revolutionary Jean-Paul Marat became an icon when his friend Jacques-Louis David painted his death at the hand of Charlotte Corday (and because of Peter Weiss’s play The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum at Charenton under the direction of the Marquis de Sade), but most people know little more about him. Certainly it is not widely known that he was an enthusiastic student of optics. He experimented with a proto-diffraction grating, challenged the assumptions of Newton, and that demonstrated the visibility of heated air rising from various surfaces, including Benjamin Franklin’s bald head.


French Forum ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 119-121
Author(s):  
Katharine Conley
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