Nutzerkonto

Malte Fabian Rauch, Nicolas Schneider: Of Peremption and Insurrection: Reiner Schürmann’s Encounter with Michel Foucault
Of Peremption and Insurrection: Reiner Schürmann’s Encounter with Michel Foucault
(S. 151 – 182)

Malte Fabian Rauch, Nicolas Schneider

Of Peremption and Insurrection: Reiner Schürmann’s Encounter with Michel Foucault

Aus: Tomorrow the Manifold. Essays on Foucault, Anarchy, and the Singularization to Come, S. 151 – 182

  • Michel Foucault
  • Topologie
  • Anarchie
  • Ethik
  • Subjektivierung

Meine Sprache
Deutsch

Aktuell ausgewählte Inhalte
Deutsch, Englisch, Französisch

Malte Fabian Rauch

is a Berlin based writer and editor. His work focuses on recent continental philosophy, contemporary art and aesthetics, as well as media and design theory. After studying in Hamburg, London and at the New School in New York, he currently works in the interdisciplinary research project “Cultures of Critique” at the Leuphana University Lüneburg.

Nicolas Schneider

Nicolas Schneider arbeitet zur Philosophie nach Kant, Kritischen Theorie und Phänomenologie. Im Anschluss an seine Promotion in Philosophie an der Kingston University London, UK, lehrte er an der Humboldt-Universität Berlin. Derzeit ist er wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter an der Universität Lüneburg.
Weitere Texte von Nicolas Schneider bei DIAPHANES
Malte Fabian Rauch (Hg.), Reiner Schürmann, ...: Tomorrow the Manifold

This collection assembles key essays of Reiner Schürmann centering on the concepts of anarchy and the singularization to come. Setting out from the question of the status of practical philosophy at the end of metaphysics, these texts track the crucial role of Schürmann’s engagement with the work of Michel Foucault between 1983 and 1991. Drawing on his highly original reading of the philosophical tradition, Schürmann traces the status of identity and difference in Foucault’s conception of history to develop a radical phenomenological understanding of anarchy. The texts pose the question of the fate of philosophy after the critique of the subject and the collapse of the divide between theory and praxis, philosophy and politics.

Besides making Schürmann’s seminal readings of Foucault widely available, the essay collection offers a concise and accessible introduction to Schürmann’s thought and documents a shift in his thinking during the 1980s. Taken together, these pivotal essays introduce the reader to the entirety of Schürmann’s most urgent concerns and assemble the conceptual tools for the project of his last book, Broken Hegemonies. This topology of broken hegemonies, which in many ways offers an alternative to Foucault’s genealogical strategy, takes the form of a subversive re-reading of the history of Western metaphysics that urges our present relentlessly toward the singularization to come. To the reader unfamiliar with Schürmann’s work, these texts establish him as one of the most radical thinkers of the late 20th century, whose work might eventually become legible in our present.