File spoon-archives/nietzsche.archive/nietzsche_1995/nietzsche_May.95, message 50


Date: Tue, 30 May 1995 13:53:40 -0800
From: demarest-AT-hevanet.com (Marc Demarest)
Subject: Re: Nietzche and Literary Theory



James:

A private response. Try Jonathan Culler's *On Deconstruction*, all of Foucault's
work (which is about nothing but power, and owes much to N's work) and Deleuze
and Guattari's work -- togther, as in Anti-Oedipus, and separately.


>Hi,
>
>I'm interested in anything concerning N's influence on Literary Theory and 
>Criticism.  If anybody can point me in the right direction, I would
appreciate it.
>
>James Garrett
>james-AT-tekelec.com
>
>
>	--- from list nietzsche-AT-jefferson.village.virginia.edu ---
>
>

--------------------------------
Marc Demarest
demarest-AT-hevanet.com

At that moment, the art of resisting words becomes useful, the art of saying
only what one wants to say, the art of doing them violence, of forcing them
to submit. In short, it is a matter of public safety to found a rhetoric, or
rather, to teach everyone the art of founding his own rhetoric.

Francis Ponge, "Rhetoric"



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