âThis is a crucial text in the development of Foucaultâs ideas about technologies of the self and the question of <i>parrÄsia</i>, especially for his contrast of Greco-Roman antiquity and early Christianity. Particularly notable is that as well as a partial record of his Toronto lectures, this volume also includes a rare record of how he conducted his seminars. Skillfully edited from surviving materials, this is a valuable addition to our understanding of Foucaultâs final projects.â
- Stuart Elden, University of Warwick,
âLorenzini and Fruchaudâs stunning introduction and annotation of Foucaultâs Toronto lectures and seminars offer something wholly unexpected: a new and unique portal onto Foucaultâs understanding of what occupied him during his final yearsânot only a personâs capacity to speak the truth, but a new understanding of how the subjectâs acquisition of truth is something much more, an assimilation that transforms the subject herself. The fact that this care of the self is a social act, not an individual one, appears center stage in Foucaultâs analysis. This volume is a precious opening for those who have thought themselves already versed in Foucaultâs work and for those newly seeking a way to think with him.â
- Ann Laura Stoler, The New School for Social Research,
âThese newly recovered lectures and seminars constitute an important chapter in Foucaultâs work on what he called âthe history of subjectivity in the West.â They show Foucault poring over the details of texts from classical antiquity so as to describe how the philosophical schools that flourished at the height of the Roman Empire produced distinctive practices of self-examination and self-cultivation. He thereby expands our sense of the possible relations among truth, speech, desire, and the self. The seminars in particular cast new light on Foucaultâs late work on sexuality, <i>parrÄsia</i>, and early Christianity.â
- David Halperin, University of Michigan,
âThese lectures and seminars come at a critical juncture in Foucaultâs work on the making of the subject: they bridge Foucaultâs interrogation of models of self-care and self-knowledge with his final work on truth-telling. Sprawling across pedagogy, spiritual combat, friendship, and therapeutic practices, these social relationships differently mediate between inner experience and external context. Learning, unlearning, struggle, critiqueâall serve as different technologies used in forging the truth-telling and self-knowledge of individuals in their relation to rule. A brilliant volume that unusually highlights Foucault thinking aloud in the classroom.â
- Nancy Luxon, University of Minnesota,
"In <i>Speaking the Truth about Oneself</i>, Fruchaud and Lorenzini deliver a highly readable set of lectures Foucault delivered in English at Victoria University (Toronto) in 1982, just two years prior to his untimely passing, lectures that are pivotal in connecting the vertices of Foucault's triangle: the will to know, the obligation to confess, and care of the self. Drawing on unpublished notes, audio recordings, and student notes, which, in some cases, Foucault himself corrected, the editors have erected an important<br /> monument to Foucault's continuing relevance."
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