Would you like to see this page in English? Click here.


または
1-Clickで注文する場合は、サインインをしてください。
または
Amazonプライム会員に適用。注文手続きの際にお申し込みください。詳細はこちら
こちらからも買えますよ
この商品をお持ちですか? マーケットプレイスに出品する
Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason (Vintage)
 
 

Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason (Vintage) [ペーパーバック]

Michel Foucault

価格: ¥ 1,284 通常配送無料 詳細
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
在庫あり。 在庫状況について
この商品は、Amazon.co.jp が販売、発送します。 ギフトラッピングを利用できます。
8点在庫あり。ご注文はお早めに。
2012/5/31 木曜日 にお届けします! 「お急ぎ便」オプション(有料)を選択して注文を確定された関東エリアへの配達のご注文が対象です。詳しくはこちら

キャンペーンおよび追加情報

  • 掲載画像とお届けする商品の表紙が異なる場合があります。ご了承ください。


よく一緒に購入されている商品

この本とDiscipline & Punish: The Birth of the Prison (Vintage) ¥ 1,531 をあわせて買う

Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason (Vintage) + Discipline & Punish: The Birth of the Prison (Vintage)
合計価格: ¥ 2,815

在庫状況の表示

  • 対象商品: Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason (Vintage)

    在庫あり。 在庫状況について
    この商品は、Amazon.co.jp が販売、発送します。
    通常配送無料(一部の商品・注文方法等を除く) 詳細

  • Discipline & Punish: The Birth of the Prison (Vintage)

    在庫あり。 在庫状況について
    この商品は、Amazon.co.jp が販売、発送します。
    通常配送無料(一部の商品・注文方法等を除く) 詳細


この商品を買った人はこんな商品も買っています


商品の説明

内容説明

Perhaps the French philosopher's masterpiece, which is concerned with an extraordinary question: What does it mean to be mad?

Book Description

Perhaps the French philosopher's masterpiece, which is concerned with an extraordinary question: What does it mean to be mad?

登録情報


この本のなか見!検索より (詳細はこちら
書き出し
AT the end of the Middle Ages, leprosy disappeared from the Western world. 最初のページを読む
その他の機能
頻出単語一覧
この本のサンプルページを閲覧する
おもて表紙 | 著作権 | 目次 | 抜粋
この本の中身を閲覧する:

この商品を見た後に買っているのは?


類似した商品から提示されたタグ

 (詳細)
関連タグ(この商品に近い関連キーワード)を追加する++最初のタグになります
 

 

カスタマーレビュー

Amazon.co.jp にはまだカスタマーレビューはありません
星5つ
星4つ
星3つ
星2つ
星1つ
Amazon.com で最も参考になったカスタマーレビュー (beta)
Amazon.com:  28個のレビュー
97 人中、88人の方が、「このレビューが参考になった」と投票しています。
The sociology of madness 2001/8/5
By TheIrrationalMan - (Amazon.com)
形式:ペーパーバック
"Madness and Civilisation", which was first published in 1959, was the first major work of the cultural critic and maverick structuralist Foucault, and it eloquently and stylishly establishes the main themes, (namely, power, knowledge, confinement) of his later works. Foucault, in his brilliant and forceful exposition, traces the codes or "epistemes" responsible for the shaping of madness from the Reneissance and up to the late nineteenth century. He charts the history of insanity from it being considered as a virtually harmless "wisdom of folly", to it being considered as a disease in the age of confinement and the psychiatric clinic. Drawing on several imprtant representations of madness in culture, which include the Ship of Fools of Jerome Bosch, and "The Disparates" of Goya, as well as the fates of Van Gogh, Nietzsche, Nerval and Artuad in the modern era, he "deconstructs" the concept of "reason" itself, by placing it in an inverse relation to supposedly "mad" experience. He asks the fundamental, and highly philosophical, question of "what does it mean to be mad, and what is the qualitative distinction between 'sanity' and 'insanity'?" This leads him to make the extraordinary claim that the "pathologisation" of madness, its treatment as a disease, is something approximating a disease of the modern era itself. Madness represents a moment of rupture, whose suppression is an attempt to avoid something mysterious, unseizable and dangerous within our own selves. In his examination of the history of confinement, and the supposed devastation that it has caused, Foucault is not trying (as his critics have alleged) to promote insanity in a bid to transgress social modes and conventional wisdom. Rather, he is attempting nothing else than a sociology of madness, by seeing how it arose in the context of modernity, with its work ethic, industrialisation, and its expansion of business enterprise, imperatives which entailed the exclusion of marginal and supposedly "deviant" behaviour. Written with considerable flair and panache, the book is highly opaque, relying much on paradox, wordplay, discontinuity and the need to undermine the rigour and consistency of "reasoned" discourse, which Foucault charges of embedding dangerous authoritarian implications. The obscurity and complexity of his style also illustrates the very pressing difficulty of trying to express any certain or objective truth about reality. The translation of Richard Howard, however, is the superior version, as it retains much of the impact of Foucault's style.
52 人中、48人の方が、「このレビューが参考になった」と投票しています。
category mistakes 2004/5/27
By カスタマー - (Amazon.com)
形式:ペーパーバック
Certain reviewers of this book seem to confuse the categories of operation Focualt addresses in this book and others. He is not making the simplistic argument that "madness" is socially constructed but rather that certain concepts, including the medicalized model of insanity, only become possible under cetain conditions and operate within a specific, historical and culutral formation of knowledge. Understanding what these conditions are, and how these change is important both to become critical concerning the limitations of current organizations of these concepts, but also so that one does not anachronistically project present concepts into the past, ie, seeing 18th century discourses as premature versions of today's ideas. The problem of madness as an object of knowledge is his task within the history of ideas, not discerning its reality.

Those that fail to recognize this, both the cultural relativists and the reactionaries, reveal their own lack of critical thought and say little about the text's strengths or weaknesses.

33 人中、30人の方が、「このレビューが参考になった」と投票しています。
A poetic historical tour de force redefining reason 1998/3/29
By Eduardo Navas(nomad@ix.netcom.com) - (Amazon.com)
形式:ペーパーバック
Madness and civilization is a powerful survey on the historical development of what we call madness today. What the term means today is radically different from what it meant during the age of reason. This book takes a more or less chronological approach to the development of madness. What is most important is it shows how the term mad was manipulated throughout history in order for society to redefine itself against "the other." This book makes a good case as to why we still live under the shadow of Freud, as Foucault credits him with defining the relationship of the clinically insane, and the physician. A must read to understand the current definition seperating the sane and the insane.

クチコミ

クチコミは、商品やカテゴリー、トピックについて他のお客様と語り合う場です。お買いものに役立つ情報交換ができます。
この商品のクチコミ一覧
内容・タイトル 返答 最新の投稿
まだクチコミはありません

複数のお客様との意見交換を通じて、お買い物にお役立てください。
新しいクチコミを作成する
タイトル:
最初の投稿:
サインインが必要です
 

クチコミを検索
すべてのクチコミを検索
   


リストマニア


関連商品を探す


同じキーワードの商品を探す


フィードバック


Amazon.co.jpのプライバシー ステートメント Amazon.co.jpの発送情報 Amazon.co.jpでの返品と交換