
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Multiplicity Multiplicity
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Process Process
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A Hermeneutics of Suspicion A Hermeneutics of Suspicion
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Unifying Principles Unifying Principles
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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1. The Self and its Vicissitudes
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Published:June 2021
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Abstract
This chapter draws on the thought of Nietzsche, Foucault and Freud to argue for a view of the self as constructed through interpretative processes. These thinkers all reject the idea of the self as a fixed and unchanging substance. This chapter employs their insights to argue that an inherently changeable self emerges in a historically specific process, involving the interpretation of bodily drives. It further explores some of their key differences, placing them in critical dialogue; with insights into the importance of other related drives in Freud and the role of institutions in Foucault adding a useful supplement to Nietzsche’s insights into the interpretative activity of drives and challenge to the idea of any simple and unified agency. Crucially, we find in these thinkers different views about what a self need, or should, look like. This disagreement on what could constitute a self, and how open its possibilities are, points to the importance of art, through which forms of possible selfhood, can be experimented with.
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