Introduction to the Philosophy of Gilles Deleuze
By (Author) Jean Khalfa
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Mansell Publishing
1st February 2003
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
History of ideas
194
Paperback
222
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
350g
Gilles Deleuze has been labelled the "post-x" thinker: post-structuralist, post-modern, post-spinozist, post-Nietzschean, and even post-utopian. This book explodes such categorizations and places Deleuze and Deleuzian method at the heart of contemporary thought. Whether analyzing the work of key philosophers, or key concepts such as time, difference and subjectivity, or the nature of creation (film, painting, literature), Deleuze's concern is always the same. From under the layers of history, criticism and interpretation, he aims to reveal the problem itself in its own life, as it develops in a particular thought or activity. This book focuses on the key processes and concepts essential to the understanding of the totality of the work, setting these within their intellectual background and context. It is designed for students across the humanities and social sciences.
Jean Khalfa is a Senior Lecturer in French Studies at Trinity College Cambridge, UK. He is the editor of the first complete edition of Michel Foucault's History of Madness (2006) and author of Poetics of the Antilles (2016) and an upcoming work on Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth.