- Title
- Discourse, cinema and desubjectification: from Foucault to Deleuze and beyond.
- Creator
- Konik, Adrian
- Subject
- Philosophy
- Subject
- f-sa
- Type
- text
- Type
- article
- Type
- Lectures
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10948/31594
- Identifier
- vital:31617
- Description
- To be clear, this was not philosophy as a discipline, which like all canonical edifices can come across as weighty, dusty and extremely boring; especially when it rather arrogantly assumes the position of arbiter of truth, and tries to determine what everybody else can or cannot think, or what they should or should not say. Rather, what I encountered again in that Honors-level philosophy module was something that I had glimpsed during my undergraduate studies, but which I had yet to fully appreciate, namely an approach to thinking that was also an approach to life, on the part of certain people who, in their time, had to a large extent philosophized privately as they carried out their many other duties, or philosophized outside of the academy, or remained on the margins of academic philosophy – men like Marcus Aurelius, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Benedictus Spinoza.
- Format
- 13 pages
- Publisher
- Nelson Mandela University
- Publisher
- Faculty of Arts
- Language
- English
- Relation
- Lecture series titles
- Relation
- Lecture series titles April 2019
- Rights
- Nelson Mandela University
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Thumbnail | File | Description | Size | Format | |||
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View Details Download | SOURCE1 | Prof A Konik 29 April 2019 Discourse cinema and desubjectification From Foucault to Deleuze and beyond.pdf | 408 KB | Adobe Acrobat PDF | View Details Download |