INTELLECTUALS & THE DIVISION OF LABOR--SARTRE ET AL

Bryan N. Alexander bnalexan at umich.edu
Thu, 3 Jul 1997 18:01:52 -0400 (EDT)


For part of an answer, let me recommend Deleuze's monographs on specific
authors.  His books on Kant, Spinoza (both of them), Nietzsche, Foucault,
and Sacher-Masoch are superb: intense readings that add to most readers'
knowledge of these thinkers.

On Thu, 3 Jul 1997, Doug Henwood wrote:

> malgosia askanas wrote:
> 
> >I think I'll take in a little dose of
> >Foucault or Deleuze to restore my faith.
> 
> Foucault I won't argue with; as much as I disagree with him, he's a serious
> guy who's worth reading. But Deleuze? Please explain to me the value of
> Deleuze. His & his sidekick Guattari's stuff just reads to me like the
> ravings of an acid casualty.
> 
> 
> Doug
> 
> --
> 
> Doug Henwood
> Left Business Observer
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> 
> 
> 



Bryan Alexander					Department of English
email: bnalexan@umich.edu			University of Michigan
phone: (313) 764-0418				Ann Arbor, MI  USA 48105
fax: (313) 763-3128				http://www.umich.edu/~bnalexan