ABSTRACT

This book makes available, for the first time in English, lectures and interviews that Foucault gave in Japan in 1978, reconstructing their context, and isolating the question of their singular relevance for us today. In these forgotten lectures, in a free and often informal style, Foucault explores, together with his Japanese interlocutors, what it would mean to take up, from outside Europe, the questions he was raising at the time about Revolution and Enlightenment in the traditions of European critical thought. In a series of wide-ranging discussions, on sexuality and its history, non-Christian forms of spirituality, new forms of political movements, and the role of knowledge, power, and truth in them, Foucault examines these questions in relationship to Asia. He had hoped these questions, very much debated at the time in postwar Japan, would be the start of new forms of translation, publication, and exchange. At the heart of the lectures is thus a search for the creation of a new sort of transnational collaboration, recasting the history of European colonialism and opening to a philosophy no longer simply Western, yet to come.

The Japan Lectures thus contribute to the new scholarship in Asian and in translation studies which has long since moved away from earlier "Area Studies"; at the same time, it participates in the new scholarship about Foucault’s own work and itinerary, following the publication of an extraordinary wealth of materials left unfinished or unpublished by his untimely death. In these ways, The Japan Lectures help us to better see the implications of Foucault’s work for philosophy in the 21st century.

chapter |22 pages

Foucault in Asia

An Introduction

part |136 pages

The Japan Lectures

chapter 1|18 pages

Power and Knowledge

chapter 2|12 pages

Sexuality and Politics

chapter 3|3 pages

Disciplinary Society in Crisis

chapter 4|20 pages

The Analytic Philosophy of Power

chapter 5|21 pages

Sexuality and Power

chapter 6|26 pages

The Theater of Philosophy

chapter 7|26 pages

Methodology for a Knowledge of the World

How to Get Rid of Marxism

chapter 8|8 pages

Michel Foucault and Zen

A Stay in a Zen Temple

chapter |26 pages

Foucault in Japan

An Interview with Shiguéhiko Hasumi