Category Archives: People

Clarence Glacken’s ‘Traces on the Rhodian Shore’ at 50: Summaries and reflections

Philip Conway discusses the recent session on Clarence Glacken’s ‘Traces on the Rhodian Shore’ at 50 held at the RGS-IBG conference. He also shares an archive interview between Glacken and Allan Pred.

Posted in Clarence J. Glacken, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Michel Foucault’s acid trip in Death Valley: Interview with Simeon Wade with great archival photos (updated)

Updated 14 November 2017: I’ve just heard that Simeon Wade died in October, making this interview even more important. There is a brief obituary here. My condolences to Wade’s family. Boom California has just published an interview with Simeon Wade, … Continue reading

Posted in Michel Foucault | 4 Comments

Foucault’s Punitive Society and my two Foucault books reviewed in 3am Magazine by Peter Gratton

Foucault’s The Punitive Society lecture course and my Foucault’s Last Decade and Foucault: The Birth of Power are reviewed in 3am Magazine by Peter Gratton. It’s a long, thoughtful and generous review. As well as saying many insightful things about the books reviewed, … Continue reading

Posted in Foucault's Last Decade, Foucault: The Birth of Power, Michel Foucault, Peter Gratton, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

5 Critical Theory books from August 2017

5 Critical Theory books from August 2017 – a useful roundup of Agamben, Kleinberg, Morton, Johnson and Lubin, and Evangelou.

Posted in Giorgio Agamben, Timothy Morton | Leave a comment

The Early Foucault update 11: Working in the Canguilhem archive at the École normale supérieure and at the Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève

I’ve been in Paris again for a few days, this time mainly to work at the Canguilhem archive at the Centre d’Archives de Philosophie, d’Histoire et d’Édition des Sciences (CAPHÉS) at the École normale supérieure. The collection comprises multiple boxes … Continue reading

Posted in Canguilhem (book), Georges Canguilhem, Henri Lefebvre, Michel Foucault, The Early Foucault, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Sur les toits – full film on prison revolts in early 1970s France now available on Youtube

Nicolas Drolc’s excellent film Sur les toits is now available in full on Youtube. It’s a documentary on the prison revolts in early 1970s France, with some references to the Prisons Information Group Foucault co-founded. The film is in French, with … Continue reading

Posted in Michel Foucault, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Judith Butler interviewed by Aaron Aquilina and Kurt Borg in CounterText

Judith Butler is interviewed by Aaron Aquilina and Kurt Borg in CounterText (requires subscription). It’s a fascinating interview with a particular focus on her interests in literature, especially Kafka, and then moves to a discussion of her career trajectory and relation … Continue reading

Posted in Judith Butler, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Nicole Loraux, “War in the Family”, translated by Adam Kotsko (open access)

Nicole Loraux’s essay “War in the Family” has been translated by Adam Kotsko, and is open access in the new issue of Parrhesia. As Adam writes, “This previously untranslated essay is discussed at length in the first half of Agamben’s … Continue reading

Posted in Giorgio Agamben, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Books received – Evangelou, Gratton, Girard, Webster, Shakespeare?

Some books received in recompense for review work for Palgrave and Bloomsbury – King Edward III, Webster’s The Duchess of Malfi, Girard’s Violence and the Sacred, Peter Gratton’s Speculative Realism and Angelos Evangelou’s Philosophizing Madness from Nietzsche to Derrida. Although … Continue reading

Posted in Friedrich Nietzsche, Jacques Derrida, Peter Gratton, Shakespearean Territories, Uncategorized, William Shakespeare | 1 Comment

New Perspectives essay by Peter Sloterdijk on ‘On Pseudonymous Politics: Regarding Implicit and Explicit Misconceptions of Democracy’ (open access)

New Perspectives has just published an open access essay by Peter Sloterdijk on ‘On Pseudonymous Politics: Regarding Implicit and Explicit Misconceptions of Democracy’ Editor Benjamin Tallis writes: ‘On Pseudonymous Politics: Regarding Implicit and Explicit Misconceptions of Democracy’ is an intervention … Continue reading

Posted in Peter Sloterdijk, Uncategorized | 1 Comment