[D-G] foucault: savages, barbarians, civilized man
Dascalu Ioana
rufilas at yahoo.ca
Mon Dec 6 02:55:17 PST 2004
You might find useful Michel Tournier's novel
"Friday", which gives a good glimpse of absolute
loneliness and of the way someone changes when
confronted to it.
What I liked most is the reversal of roles, whereby
the savage, Friday, takes control of Robinson's life.
They also made a movie starring Sir Lawrence Olivier.
Let me write my favourite citation of the book:
" Face is that part of our flesh which is continuously
modelled , heatened and animated by the presence of
our fellows. A person which has just left someone with
whom he had a productive conversation preserves on his
face an obvious joy gradually fading in time; that
flame will light up again when he finds another real
friend."
--- Sylvie Ruelle <sylvieruelle at earthlink.net> a écrit
:
> for some strange reason i am always led back to
> the notions of savage,
> barbarians, and
> civilized man. i am wondering where this would
> tie in with the
> discussions we are having.
>
>
> Foucault's "Society Must Be Defended" has an
> excellent discussion of
> these notions and I
> would like to know a film that uses these
> notions. So far I can think
> of "Quest for Fire" but
> I am not sure if it uses these notions in the
> proper sense of
> Deleuzian thought. And, of
> course, it does not reach the point of civilized
> man in it's storyline
> but there must be a film
> where all three are included. And I am also
> thinking of "Brotherhood
> of the Wolf" that
> might contain all three.
>
>
>
>
> Ms. Sylvie Ruelle
> http://home.earthlink.net/~sylvieruelle
>
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