Search
Home arrow Online Shop
Snagging Shop
Make sure you find all
the defects in your
new home. Purchase
our snagging guide.
Snagging Guide
Reviews
Get a professional
snagger to create a
snag list for your new
property in the UK or Ireland.
Snagging Inspections
Main Menu
Home
New Homes News
Snagging Stories
New Homes Research
Snagging Forum
Snagging Cloud
Snagging Top Ten
Web Links
Snagging Photos
Property Books
Online Shop
Polls
Press
 
Login for Download
Contact us
 
Site Map
New Build Inspections
The leading truly independent snagging company.

UK: Snagging
Ireland: Snag List
Money Supermarket.com
Cheap Home Insurance and Compare Mortgages at Moneysupermarket.com
HIPS Directory
Find HIPS Providers in your local area using the HIP Central Home Information Pack Directory
Property Links

Investment Property
Let Choices help you find investment property.

Bermondsey Property
Search for Bermondsey Property in London. Hot Property has thousand of properties for sale in Bermondsey and property throughout the UK

Offplan Property
Are you looking for offplan property? Attend an inexpensive property seminar and get expert advice on property investment.

Walthamstow Flats
Find a Walthamstow Flat with Hot Property. We have over 95 thousand houses and flats on our database, including flats in Walthamstow

Parking in London
Think it's impossible? Find parking in London. More information at Gumtree.


 
Advertisement

The History of Sexuality: The Will to Knowledge v. 1

Snagging.org In association with Amazon.co.uk

Online Shop | Property Guides |  Kitchen & Home |  Garden Tools |  Power Tools |  Consumer Electronics

Get the Snagging Checklist Here!


  



The History of Sexuality: The Will to Knowledge v. 1
by: Michel Foucault

 : The History of Sexuality: The Will to Knowledge v. 1

List Price: £8.99
Amazon.co.uk's Price: £6.74
You Save: £2.25 (25%)
Prices subject to change.



Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours



This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 155
EAN: 9780140268683
Edition: New edition
ISBN: 0140268685
Label: Penguin
Manufacturer: Penguin
Number Of Pages: 176
Publication Date: October 29, 1998
Publisher: Penguin
Studio: Penguin




Related Items:



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Brilliant, but requires grounding in order to fully appreciate.
This was the second book by Foucault which I endeavored to read, the first being the classic "Discipline and Punish". The first time I made my way through this short book I was aware, on some level at least, that I was approaching the topic of human sexuality in both an ingenius and idiosyncratic manner. However, by the time I had finished it I was well aware that I hadn't grasped what was being conveyed adequately. In retrospect I think that this may have been due to the difference between the respective "nodal points" in which Foucault grounds his theories, or, more precisely, in which Foucault generalises the otherwise ungeneralisable material in order to accommodate the ill-prepared reader to accepting the asubjective position neccesary to appreciate fully his historicism. It seems to be a rhetorical tactic deployed in order to break "molar" conceptualisations through the use of spectres of these very forms of conceptualisations; which are masterfully used in order to demonstrate their own transparency.

I have in mind specifically the concepts of "panopticism" and "biopower" (and later "governmentality"). The former is fully operative throughout Discipline and Punish and allows the reader a "way in" in order to begin to grasp the historical dynamic operative behind the "disciplines". However, the latter, which is operative throughout the present book, is, in my opinion at least, far more wide-ranging and thus far more abstract. To grasp it in its (non) totality is quite difficult. For this reason I recommend that the serious reader undertake a small amount of background research. The lecture courses given by Foucault at the College de France prior to the release of the History ("Psychiatric Power", "The Abnormals" and "Society Must Be Defended") are most helpful as well as being extremely interesting (with "Security, Territory, Population" being an excellent follow up to the theory). By studying them the reader is allowed to observe the week by week formation of Foucault's late thought, I found that after doing so I was quite literally able to follow Foucault's argument word for word, with many of his examples sparking off many other examples given in the lecture courses.

In addition to this I think it extremely helpful, if not necceary, to have a relatively decent understanding of previous theories of societal sexual repression. It seems that the book is, at base, a polemic on the Marxo-Freudian theories of Reich, Marcuse and the Frankfurt School generally, once again by being able to recognise this one can uncover the deeper layers of Foucault's thought.

Apart from the need for some moderate background knowledge I found the History quite a pleasant read. It was relatively straightfoward and, in contrast to most works connected with structuralism, required little de-coding. If, like one of the previous reviewers, you bought this short book and felt, as I did at first, that you didn't get enough out of it then I can't recommend enough that you do the background reading, I guarentee that it's well worth it.

Hopefully this suggestion will help to exorcise the figure of the "disgruntled reviewer"; that shrill poltergeist who haunts and antagonises the otherwise open space given us by Amazon in which to express one's thoughts about the fine wares on display. Then again, anyone who feels the need to use said space to blow off steam everytime something escapes their grasp will undoubtably be far too lazy to undertake such a venture. Who knows, they may even learn something new and not need to resort to barely veiled homophobic insults?



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - The Will to Cloud the Issue
The inane self-contradictory ramblings of a man with serious issues concerning his own sexuality.He purports to prove that there was no sexual repression by constantly referring to the enormous amount of repression present during the Victorian age. He seems to feel that the amount of discussion surrounding sex is the main problem and then proceeds to discuss it. The book is a mass of self-contradictory postulations and dubious historical references. A book so completely devoid of the logical objective reasoning he claims to bring to the subject that it begs the question " what is he really on about".



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - A well-presented work of enlightened essence
Readable and digestable is very much what can characterise the style of the book. In content, Foucault explores the creation of sexual categories and their relevance to the power structures of the capitalist society. It is a clear treatise on sexual fascism and how it is used to the ends of the power structure. Inherent within the book, and it is this which makes it different from other attempts, is the manner in which Foucault views the conditioning of sexuality as part of our Western scientific tradition. In certain respects, he is unscathed by that same tradition in the way he comments on sexuality and its deployment as a tool for power. In this way, the book does not reflect a critique of the capitalist economy more than a realisation of the way power is ingrained within the structures of the political economy and the psyche of the people.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - so much more than a history of sexuality
This, the first volume of French philosopher Michel Foucault's tripartite study of sexuality is as idiosyncratic as the man himself. Unlike the works of a number of his colleages, this book is highly accessible and of interest to any broadminded reader, although it would be of particular interest to students of philosophy, sociology, gender, politics, religion, history etc etc.. I personally have recommended H.O.S.1 to a number of friends and have yet to receive a negative response. While more of an intellectual curiosity than a full blown philosophy, Foucault's concepts reverberate far beyond the parameters of the book's subject.




Try searching the Internet for "The History of Sexuality: The Will to Knowledge v. 1" or Ebay for "The History of Sexuality: The Will to Knowledge v. 1".

 

You might also be interested in the following great products:

Latest Tags


Popular Tags


  
Snagging List

Generated in 3.71344 Seconds