Foucault Studies is pleased to announce the publication of issue 17
A Special Issue on Foucault and Deleuze
guest edited by Nicolae Morar, Thomas Nail, Daniel W. Smith
Issue 17 also includes:
3 original articles on the topics of:
Foucault’s discursive practices
Orientalist discourses in Foucault’s work
Foucault’s late studies of and with classical Greek and Roman texts
9 book reviews
Foucault Studies is an electronic, open access, peer reviewed, international journal that provides a forum for scholarship engaging the intellectual legacy of Michel Foucault, interpreted in the broadest possible terms. We welcome submissions ranging from theoretical explications of Foucault’s work and texts to interdisciplinary engagements across various fields, to empirical studies of contemporary phenomena using Foucaultian.
All articles are freely available as open access on our website:
Number 17:
April 2014: Foucault and Deleuze
Table of Contents
Editorial
Sverre Raffnsøe, Alain Beaulieu, Sam Binkley, Patricia Clough, Sven Opitz, Jyoti Puri, Jens Erik Kristensen, Alan Rosenberg, Marius Gudmand-Høyer, Johanna Oksala, Knut Ove Eliassen, Mathias Adam Munch
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Special Issue on Foucault and Deleuze
Foucault and Deleuze – Guest Editors’ Introduction
Nicolae Morar, Thomas Nail, Daniel W. Smith
Three Concepts for Crossing the Nature-Artifice Divide: Technology, Milieu, and Machine
Marco Altamirano
Becoming-Other: Foucault, Deleuze, and the Political Nature of Thought
Vernon W. Cisney
Freedom, Teleodynamism, Creativity
William E. Connolly
Ethics and the ontology of freedom: problematization and responsiveness in Foucault and Deleuze
Erinn Cunniff Gilson
Foucault and Deleuze: Making a Difference with Nietzsche
Wendy Grace
Uncertain Ontologies
Dianna Taylor
Toward a Theory of Transversal Politics: Deleuze and Foucault’s Block of Becoming
Christopher Penfield
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Articles
Reclaiming discursive practices as an analytic focus: Political implications
Carol Bacchi, Jennifer Bonham
Orientalism as a form of Confession
Andrea Teti
For The Love Of Boys
John M. Carvalho
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Reviews
Johanna Oksala, Foucault, Politics, and Violence (Evanston, Il: Northwestern University Press, 2012)
Christopher Mayes
Luca Paltrinieri, L’expérience du concept (Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne, 2012)
Matteo Vagelli
Simon O’Sullivan, On the Production of Subjectivity: Five Diagrams of the Finite-Infinite Relation (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012)
Tara Marie Dankel
Paul Elliot, Guattari Reframed (London; New York: I.B. Tauris, 2012)
Jonathan Fardy
Mark Bonta and John Protevi, Deleuze and Geophilosophy: A Guide and Glossary (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2004)
Cheryl Gilge, Keith Harris
Colin Koopman, Genealogy as Critique: Foucault and the Problems of Modernity (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2013)
George W. Shea, IV

The editors mention in the introduction to the issue that the ‘transcribed lectures on Foucault are over 400,000 words long (1600 pages)’ and that your ‘team [undertook] a transcription of Deleuze’s seminar on Foucault […] completed by Annabelle Dufourcq in 2013 and […] now available on the Paris 8 website as well as our parallel site at Purdue’.
But I’ve reached some of the later seminars, namely starting from ‘Le Pouvoir cours 11 – 21/01/1986 – 1’ up to the final ‘Le Pouvoir cours 22 – 06/05/1986 – 4’, and the French transcriptions are simply not available online, nor in the Paris 8 website nor at Purdue’s (with the sole exception being ‘Le Pouvoir cours 13 – 25/02/1986 – 1’).
I was wondering if someone could clarify for me if the French transcriptions are momentarily not available due to some technical problems at both websites or if those specific transcriptions are still being made.
Thank you
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