Description
Daniel Louis Wyche examines the political implications of what he calls practices of ethical self-change. These include Pierre Hadot's notion of "spiritual exercises"; what the French sociologist of labor Georges Friedmann calls the "interior effort"; Michel Foucault's ethics of the "care of the self"; what Martin Luther King Jr. refers to as the work of "self-purification" integral to direct action; and Audre Lorde's claim that caring for herself constitutes a form of "political warfare." Wyche argues that these concepts can collectively provide an understanding that effaces distinctions between the care of the self, the other, and the community in a way that avoids reducing the political to the ethical. Ambitious and nuanced, The Care of the Self and the Care of the Other offers a framework for unifying individual moral action and collective political life.
About the Author
Daniel Louis Wyche is a senior fellow at the Columbia Center for Contemporary Critical Thought.
Reviews
A brilliant and much-needed defense of the philosophical value of practices of self-transformation, and of their ethico-political relevance. In this book, Wyche combines an extraordinary mastery in interpreting the works of figures as (apparently) disparate as Pierre Hadot, Michel Foucault, Martin Luther King, Jr., or Audre Lorde with a unique philosophical sensitivity to the issues and tensions of our present. -- Daniele Lorenzini, author of The Force of Truth: Critique, Genealogy, and Truth-Telling in Michel Foucault
Book Information
ISBN 9780231207805
Author Daniel Louis Wyche
Format Hardback
Page Count 352
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press