Last time, I setup a question about Foucault’s anti-humanism. His comments in Order of Things are famous, and the recent publication of a 1954-5 lecture course he delivered at Lille as La question anthropologique offers a chance to think about the evolution of his thought on the subject. One clue that something is different is that Ludwig Feuerbach, one of the “Young Hegelians” in Marx’s early-career circle, is prominent in the 1950s version but not the one ten years later, even though Feuerbach’s name was prominently associated with objectionable humanism by Foucault’s teacher Althusser at the time Order of Things appeared.
I want to approach the questions that this poses not by asking where Feuerbach went – I don’t really have any evidence on that either way (yet?) – but to ask where Feuerbach came from in the 1950s. Recent scholarship offers some really interesting work on that question. If one were to ask where Foucault got the idea of anti-humanism, Heidegger would be an obvious starting point. As Arianna Sforzini suggests in her introduction to La question anthropologique, “Foucault is in agreement with the observation formulated by Heidegger from 1929: ‘anthropology today is no longer, and hasn’t for a long time, just been the title of a discipline.” (235, the Heidegger reference is to his Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics, p. 147 in the English. Original: GA 5, 209).
We know that Foucault had read a lot of Heidegger. Jean-Baptiste Vuillerod’s recent La naissance de l’anti-hégélianisme, about which much more later, reports that “we find in the Foucault archives hundreds of pages of notes taken on Heidegger, which he read in German.” In box 33a-0, for example, “we find long commentaries, translations and paraphrases of the following texts:” What is called Thinking?, Letter on Humanism, ‘Who is Nietzsche’s Zarathustra,’ ‘Building, Dwelling, thinking,” “Nietzsche’s Word: God is Dead,” “Overcoming Metaphysics,” “The Age of the World Picture,” “Anaximander’s Language,” and “a series of citations on the principal Heideggerian concepts.”
(more…)