Skip to product information
1 of 1

A Face Drawn in Sand

Regular price $27.00
Sale price $27.00 Regular price $27.00
Sale Sold out
Rey Chow rearticulates the plight of the humanities in the age of global finance and neoliberal mores through a focus on Foucault’s concept “outside.” She foregrounds a nonutilitarian approach, str...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 13 April 2021
View Product Details

Leadership, innovation, diversity, inclusiveness, sharing, accountability—such is the resounding administrative refrain we keep hearing in the contemporary Western university. What kinds of benefits does this refrain generate? For whom? What discursive incitements undergird such benefits? Although there are innumerable discussions of Michel Foucault in the English-speaking academy, seldom is his work used systematically to unravel the dead ends and potentialities of humanistic inquiry as embedded in these simple but dynamic questions.

Rey Chow takes up this challenge by articulating the plight of the humanities in the age of global finance and neoliberal mores through a resharpened focus on Foucault’s concept “outside.” This general discussion is followed by a series of micro-arguments about several loosely linked topics: the biopolitics of literary study, visibilities and invisibilities, race and racism, sound/voice/listening, and confession and self-entrepreneurship. Against what she polemicizes as the moralistic-entrepreneurial norming of knowledge production, Chow foregrounds a nonutilitarian approach, stressing anew the intellectual and pedagogical objectives fundamental to humanistic inquiry: How to process, analyze, and evaluate different types of texts across languages and disciplines; how to form and sustain viable arguments; how to rethink familiar problems through less known as well as very well-known sources, figures, and methods. Above all, she asks in an abidingly humanistic spirit, how not to know all the answers before the questions have been posed.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $27.00
Pages: 232
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 13 April 2021
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231188371
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

LITERARY CRITICISM / Semiotics & Theory, EDUCATION / Philosophy, Theory & Social Aspects, PHILOSOPHY / Movements / Critical Theory

In this lucid, concise, and passionate book, Rey Chow theorizes the dire effects of entrepreneurial capitalism in our digital age while showing how a humanistic intellectual should confront the essential problems created and obscured by that capitalism. This recovery of Foucault is brilliant, timely, and liberating.
Rey Chow is Andrew W. Mellon Distinguished Professor of the Humanities at Duke University. She is the author of Entanglements, or Transmedial Thinking About Capture (2012) and Not Like a Native Speaker: On Languaging as a Postcolonial Experience (Columbia, 2014), among other works, and the coeditor of Sound Objects (2019).

Part I. Humanistic Inquiry in the Era of the Moralist-Entrepreneur
Introduction: Rearticulating “Outside”
Part II. Exercises in the Unthought
1. Literary Study’s Biopolitics
2. “There Is a ‘There Is’ of Light”; or, Foucault’s (In)visibilities
3. Thinking “Race” with Foucault
4. “Fragments at Once Random and Necessary”: The Énoncé Revisited, Alongside Acousmatic Listening
5. From the Confessing Animal to the Smartself
Coda: Intimations from a Series of Faces Drawn in Sand
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index