Philosophers DVD: Noam Chomsky and Michel Foucault

The well-known Chomsky-Foucault debate, plus the other discussions in the series, including one with Henri Lefebvre.

Clare O'Farrell's avatarFoucault News

Philosophers DVD
Author(s): Moderator and commentator Fons Elders
Noam Chomsky and Michel Foucault
Sir Alfred Ayer and Arne Naess
Leszek Kolakowski and Henri Lefèbvre
Sir Karl Popper and Sir John Eccles

A series by Fons Elders

This DVD is available at a more reasonable price from Fons Elders’ site than from Icarus films.

Review by Brian Boling

In 1971, a Dutch initiative called the International Philosophers Project brought together the leading thinkers of the day for a series of one-on-one debates. The participants included intellectual superstars Alfred Ayer and Arne Naess, Karl Popper and John Eccles, Leszek Kolakowski and Henri Lefèbvre, and – most notably, in a now justifiably famous exchange – Noam Chomsky and Michel Foucault.

This two-disc set collects all four remarkable conversations, along with introductions and commentary by Dutch philosopher and writer Fons Elders. Elders moderated the original debates – hand-picking each of the participants after spending…

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Visualising The Birth of Territory – the animated movie by Juliet J Fall

Visualising “The Birth of Territory” Juliet J Fall, Université de Genève from Juliet Fall on Vimeo.

This is the version of the animated presentation Juliet J Fall gave at the AAG Annual Meeting in Tampa, Florida, on 7th April 2014 as part of the “Author meets critics” session on the book The Birth of Territory, by Stuart Elden. Session organised by Claudio Minca and Jeremy Crampton. (No soundtrack)
If you liked this, you might consider joining our Masters programme in Political and Cultural Geography, at the University of Geneva, Switzerland. Specialisations in Visual Studies, including documentary filmmaking (mostly about real people and places, not only toys!). Taught mostly in French. unige.ch/ses/geo/etudes/Master-1.html

Many thanks to Juliet for making this extraordinary piece of work.

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Interview with Emily Brady on her book, The Sublime in Modern Philosophy: Aesthetics, Ethics, and Nature

Interview with Emily Brady at the Society and Space open site.

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Volume 32, Issue 2 now out

New issue of Society and Space out now.

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Contested urban spaces and imaginations

two new urban reviews in Society and Space.

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Foucault’s Last Decade – Update 11

Update 11I’d hoped to get right back to the Foucault work on my return from Australia, mainly the chapter on governmentality, but spent much time catching up on other things and getting ready for my trip to Florida (for the AAG meeting) and then onto New York.

Instead of going straight onto a new chapter, I spent what time I had fixing a number of small things that I couldn’t address in Melbourne – mainly odd references and texts that were not available in libraries there. These included the little Archives de l’infamie collection; the book of interviews with Roger-Pol Droit; Le Cercle amoreux d’Henry Legrand; and the text of Foucault’s contribution to the 1975 Schizo-Culture conference, ‘Infantile Sexuality’. That last text, previously presented at Berkeley in May, only available in Foucault: Live, and, as far as I’m aware, not in French, is almost the Urtext of the first volume of The History of Sexuality.

I also posted a few translated excerpts from the discussion following Foucault’s 1973 Rio lectures ‘Truth and Juridical Forms’. Then, getting a bit ahead of myself, I wrote a short piece on the English language sources of the recently published L’origine de l’herméneutique de soi from late 1980.

In addition I re-read Le beau danger/Speech Begins after Death which comes from 1968 but I wanted to check for a few things. Some other things that will have minimal impact on the book itself, but were important in terms of the approach I’m taking – of following leads even when I expect they go nowhere. So I checked back to the original source of the Pierre Rivière story, and took a look at a text Foucault mentioned in a 1974 lecture, Anthropologie du conscrit français.

This now means Chapters Two to Five are in pretty good shape. Chapter One is a bit of a mess, partly because it is waiting for a section on Théories et institutions pénales to be slotted in, and because I need to cut down the discussion of La société punitive.

I’ll be in New York from mid-April to early June. My work there will be on different projects and so I’ll now put the Foucault work to one side until the summer.When I return I will at least be able to work on Foucault’s post-sabbatical lecture courses in correct order with no gaps, as Subjectivité et vérité is due out in May. I say a bit about the chronology of future courses in French and English here.

You can read more about the Foucault’s Last Decade project, along with links to previous updates, here.

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Nigel Thrift and Steven Koonin discuss urban science and big data

Nigel Thrift, Vice Chancellor of University of Warwick, and Steven Koonin, Director of New York University’s Center for Urban Science and Progress, partners in this endeavour, discussed the emerging field of applied urban science and informatics, the opportunities it presents, and how it is challenging the way we think about information. The discussion was moderated by Sallie Keller, Director, Social Decision and Analytics Laboratory, Virginia Bioinformatics Institute at Virginia Tech.

Video available here or above.

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David Harvey, Seventeen Contradictions and the End of Capitalism – video of LSE talk

A video of David Harvey’s recent talk on the book here.

Thanks to dmfant for the link in comments to this post previewing parts of the book.

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David Harvey, Seventeen Contradictions and the End of Capitalism

9781781251607David Harvey has a piece at the White Review which comprises the final two chapters of his new book, Seventeen Contradictions and the End of Capitalism.

You can also read the Prologue: The Crisis of Capitalism This Time Around.

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McKenzie Wark on the Birth of Thanaticism

McKenzie Wark on the ‘Birth of Thanaticism‘ – a replacement term for capitalism. Climate change, surveillance, public idiots, the crisis of universities, all in here… I did like the idea of the ‘inhumanities and antisocial sciences’ though…

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