Foucault's Orient R. Hal RitterFoucault lived in Tunisia for two years and travelled to Japan and Iran more than once. Yet throughout his critical scholarship, he insisted that the cultures of the Orient constitute the limit of Western rationality. Using archival research supplemented by interviews with key scholars in Tunisia, Japan and France, this book examines the philosophical sources, evolution as well as contradictions of Foucaults experience with non Western cultures.
They examine the historical emergence of critical learning theory
Western philosophy concerned itself with a quest for unity both in terms of the systematization of knowledge and as a metaphysical search for a unity of being-two trends that can be regarded as converging and culminating in Hegel's system of absolute idealism
But in the face of four centuries of writing on this natural wonder
environmental health and justice
Applying the methodologies of the holistic education model to the study of four Shakespearean plays – Othello
and nutritious food requires a concerted effort that involves politics
It also aims at investigating topics that are under-exploited in previous sourcebooks
Henri Hubert and Robert Hertz) are significantly more complicated than this
alongside major objects now held in the Collection of Classical Antiquities and the Museum of European Cultures
Fire and Roses shows that the "postmodern theme" is something much more than the play of disconnection and diversity
including administrative
and want to tell its very American story