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Discussion Thoughts On Post-structuralism?

Joined
Mar 3, 2026
Messages
20
I've returned to the essays of Barthes in recent times, and, exposed myself again to the post-structuralist dialogues. To me the questions of the somatic condition, as well as the condition of 'questions' themselves are the most important critique to have.

Before committing myself as a post-structuralist, I was somewhere between the logical atomists of Wittgenstein and Russell mixed with the somatic expression of Frantz Fanon. At that point in time, language was the thing I was most suspicious of as a sociological artifact and function. I haven't really lost my suspicion but I would say it's shifted. I also enjoy the rejection of totality as a philosophical end, it doesn't claim to solve anything as much as it wants to understand how things got to their position within society. Post-structuralism can be a kind of dialectal analysis, although unlike Marxism, which can't exactly tell you how to live. Post-structuralists can grapple with things like "Transendence" however, I can't really find myself in agreement with the Kantian and Hegelian methodology. Post-structuralists also aren't really concerned with mythologizing sanctimony I find most philosophy tends to point towards.

I am a big fan of the Foucauldian analysis of history, specifically his History on Sexuality was particularly illuminating in the capital of identity. I've read a portion of D&G, although, their retreat into the purely metaphysical and the conception of something like, "radical autonomy as the rupture of violence" I thought was a bit confusing. Most, if not all post-structuralist reject the liberal idea of a fixed, "I" and yet, I am not exactly certain how someone would exist as a rhizome might, and not be fixed. I'm not sure how you would be certain you are in the middle expanding instead of being a singular fixed system. Foucault seems to accept the improbability of escaping the "system" and focused on practicing life. That is, all systems of power will have gaps and cracks, in which "resistance" is possible. That through these practices of resistance, one might find himself at the very least "liberated." Although, I am suspicious of his practice of life.

Anyway, has anyone else read any post-structuralist works? If you have, I'm curious on your thoughts!
 
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Joined
Apr 5, 2025
Messages
99
Focault, Barthes... The entire thread reads as "I'm a big fan of modernist English literature" (but read it all in Arabic translation for I am an Arab).

The unspoken pre-requisite for consuming foreign high culture is near-fluency in the targeted language; in case of philosophy, on top of general knowledge of ancient languages. Otherwise it comes off as parading as an upper class while being a trailer trash.

Here's an interesting tidbit: the first English translation of Gustave Flobert was done in the mid 1880s, strangely by a daughter of Karl Marx. Why 30 years too late and why by a leftist activist? Likely because those who read Gustave Flaubert to date and Norf English workers had different outlooks on life.

Emily Marx later pulled off Madame Bovary herself and comitted suicide. Now, that I call practical philisophy!

Wake up, troon, you're in a psychosis and have no clue. Reading Vietnamese newspapers will be just as deep and puzzling; don't forget to report back.
 
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