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Wrong-Doing, Truth-Telling

The Function of Avowal in Justice

Wrong-Doing, Truth-Telling( )
Author: Foucault, Michel
Editor: Brion, Fabienne
Harcourt, Bernard E.
Translator: Sawyer, Stephen W.
Series title:Emersion: Emergent Village Resources for Communities of Faith Ser.
ISBN:978-0-226-25770-9
Publication Date:Jun 2014
Publisher:University of Chicago Press
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:AUD $62.95
Book Description:

Three years before his death Michel Foucault gave a series of lectures at the Catholic University of Louvain that have remained relatively unknown until only recently. Entitled Wrong-Doing, Truth-Telling, these lectures provides the missing link between Foucault’s early work on sexuality and punishment and his later work on Greek and Roman antiquity. Ranging broadly from Homer to the 20th century, Foucault traces how the early ethical acts of truth-telling in ancient...
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Book Details
Pages:360
Detailed Subjects: Religion / Christianity / Catholic
Law / General
Psychology / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):15.24 x 22.86 x 3.556 cm
Book Weight:0.627 Kilograms
Author Biography
Foucault, Michel (Author)
Michel Foucault was born on October 15, 1926, in Poitiers, France, and was educated at the Sorbonne, in Paris. He taught at colleges all across Europe, including the Universities of Lill, Uppsala, Hamburg, and Warsaw, before returning to France. There he taught at the University of Paris and the College of France, where he served as the chairman of History of Systems of Thought until his death.

Regarded as one of the great French thinkers of the twentieth century, Foucault's interest was in the human sciences, areas such as psychiatry, language, literature, and intellectual history. He made significant contributions not just to the fields themselves, but to the way these areas are studied, and is particularly known for his work on the development of twentieth-century attitudes toward knowledge, sexuality, illness, and madness.

Foucault's initial study of these subjects used an archaeological method, which involved sifting through seemingly unrelated scholarly minutia of a certain time period in order to reconstruct, analyze, and classify the age according to the types of knowledge that were possible during that time. This approach was used in Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason, for which Foucault received a medal from France's Center of Scientific Research in 1961, The Birth of the Clinic, The Order of Things, and The Archaeology of Knowledge.

Foucault also wrote Discipline and Punishment: The Birth of the Prison, a study of the ways that society's views of crime and punishment have developed, and The History of Sexuality, which was intended to be a six-volume series. Before he could begin the final two volumes, however, Foucault died of a neurological disorder in 1984.

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