Search Books

Forget Foucault (Semiotext(e) / Foreign Agents)

Author Jean Baudrillard
Publisher Semiotext(e)
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
8.70 14.95 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $4.70

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
PublisherSemiotext(e)
ISBN / ASIN1584350415
ISBN-139781584350415
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,051,604
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

In 1976, Jean Baudrillard sent this essay to the French magazine Critique, where Michel Foucault was an editor. Foucault was asked to reply, but remained silent. Forget Foucault (1977) made Baudrillard instantly infamous in France. It was a devastating revisitation of Foucault's recent History of Sexuality--and of his entire oeuvre--and also an attack on those philosophers, like Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, who believed that desire could be revolutionary. In Baudrillard's eyes, desire and power were interchangeable, so desire had no place in Foucault's work. There is no better introduction to Baudrillard's polemical approach to culture than these pages, in which Baudrillard dares Foucault to meet the challenge of his own thought. This Semiotext(e) edition of Forget Foucault is accompanied by a dialogue with Sylvère Lotringer, "Forget Baudrillard," a reevaluation by Baudrillard of his lesser-known early works as a post-Marxian thinker. Lotringer presses Baudrillard to explain how he arrived at his infamous extrapolationist theories from his roots in the nineteenth and early twentieth century social and anthropological works of Karl Marx, Marcel Mauss, and Emil Durkheim.