Oedipus Rex as a philosophical and political strategy
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/88780Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Moreno Pestaña, José LuisEditorial
SAGE
Date
2020Referencia bibliográfica
The Sociological Review 2020, Vol. 68(5) 1092– 1107
Abstract
This article studies Michel Foucault’s interpretation of the tragedy Oedipus Rex. The analysis seeks
to uncover the various intellectual strategies around his study. First, Foucault takes a position in
the political debate about prisons in France in the early 1970s. Second, his analysis of the tragedy
contributes to position his work in the field of the philosophical history of truth, by singularising
his project and separating it from the dominant models of the history of philosophy. Third,
Foucault aims to differentiate himself from the results of the historical work of the Paris School.
This article analyses how Foucault depends on these interpretations and how it helps him to
acquire philosophical relevance. Through the sociology of intellectual history’s perspective, the
article elaborates the contributions and limits of Foucault’s perspective.