Paul-Michel Foucault: A Philosophist

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Michel Foucault his full name was Paul-Michel Foucault, was born October 15, 1926, Poitiers France—died June 25, 1984, Paris. He the grandson of a physician.You could say that he was born into a solidly bourgeois family, Also his father was a doctor so you can see that being intelligent runs in the family, his mother was just any ordinary housewife Foucault’s mother, Anne, was likewise the daughter of a surgeon, and had longed to follow a medical career, but her wish had to wait until Foucault’s younger brother as such a career was not available for women at the time. It is surely no coincidence then that much of Foucault’s work would revolve around the critical interrogation of medical discourses .Foucault was schooled in Poitiers during the years of German occupation Foucault excelled at philosophy and, having from a young age declared his intention to pursue an academic career, persisted in defying his father, who wanted the young Paul-Michel to follow his forebears into the medical profession. The conflict with his father may have been a factor in Foucault’s dropping the ‘Paul’ from his name. The relationship between father and son remained cool through to the latter’s death in 1959, though Foucault remained close to his mother.

http://www.biography.com/people/michel-foucault-9299693

His impressive career Foucault became known for his many demonstrative arguments that power depends not on material relations or authority but instead primarily on discursive networks. This new perspective as applied to old questions such as madness, social discipline, body-image, truth, normative sexuality etc. were instrumental in designing the post-modern intellectual landscape we are still in nowadays. Today Michel Foucault is liste...

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... “the emergence of ownership and l strict copyright rules” (p.1628). Foucault recognises that “the transgressive properties always intrinsic to the act of writing became the forceful imperative of literature” (p.1628). The fundamental problem with this is the inability to define what should be classed as literature. One cannot place so much emphasis on the creator over the creation. Do we class all the published works by Shakespeare as literature? If tomorrow, an unpublished work of his was discovered, would that automatically become classed as worthwhile by default? If a letter cannot have an author, just a signatory then what writings by an author can be classed as literature? As the author’s name became an intrinsic part of literature, so did the restrictions surrounding an author’s work.

Michel Foucault died on June 25, 1984 due the cause of HIV/AIDS.

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