Menu Expand
Foucault's Orient

Foucault's Orient

Marnia Lazreg

(2017)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

Foucault lived in Tunisia for two years and travelled to Japan and Iran more than once. Yet throughout his critical scholarship, he insisted that the cultures of the “Orient” constitute the “limit” of Western rationality. Using archival research supplemented by interviews with key scholars in Tunisia, Japan and France, this book examines the philosophical sources, evolution as well as contradictions of Foucault’s experience with non-Western cultures.  Beyond tracing Foucault’s journey into the world of otherness, the book reveals the personal, political as well as methodological effects of a radical conception of cultural difference that extolled the local over the cosmopolitan.


“This is a serious and pivotal book that shows the limits of Foucault’s rejection of universalism and humanism. Lazreg’s book allows us to re-read Foucault within his boundaries.” · Massimiliano Tomba, University of Padua.


Marnia Lazreg is professor of sociology at Hunter College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York. Her latest publications include Torture and the Twilight of Empire: From Algiers to Baghdad (Princeton, 2008); and Questioning the Veil: Open Letters to Muslim Women (Princeton, 2009).

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Contents 7
Acknowledgments 9
Introduction 11
Chapter 1 — The Chinese Encyclopedia and the Challenge of Difference 23
Chapter 2 — Madness and Cultural Difference 55
Chapter 3 — Foucault and Kant's Cosmopolitan Anthropology 72
Chapter 4 — Foucault's Negative Anthropology 107
Chapter 5 — Foucault's Anthropology of the Iranian Revolution 132
Chapter 6 — The Heterotopia of Tunisia 169
Chapter 7 — The Enigma of Japan 202
Chapter 8 — Japan and Foucault's Anthropological Bind 236
Epilogue 255
Bibliography 265
Index 284