[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"doc-detail-40765-en":3,"doc-seo-40765-105":30,"detail-sidebar-cat-0-en-105":90},{"code":4,"msg":5,"data":6},0,"success",{"doc_id":7,"user_id":8,"nickname":9,"user_avatar":10,"doc_module":4,"category_id":11,"category_name":12,"doc_title":13,"doc_description":14,"doc_content":15,"file_id":16,"file_url":17,"file_type":18,"file_size":19,"view_count":20,"is_deleted":4,"is_public":21,"is_downloadable":21,"audit_status":21,"page_count":22,"language":23,"language_code":24,"site_id":25,"html_lang":24,"table_of_contents":26,"faqs":27,"seo_title":13,"seo_description":14,"update_tm":28,"read_time":29},40765,2336464648746,"Skyler","https://ap-avatar.wpscdn.com/davatar_276721f389ce27ea32af1340a28f341c",2,"Literature","Archaeology of Knowledge Michel Foucault","Archaeology of Knowledge by Michel Foucault presents a structured inquiry into how discourse is organized, regulated, and transformed. The work develops concepts of discursive unities, formations, and the formation of objects, enunciative modalities, concepts, and strategies. It advances the analysis of statements and the archive through notions such as enunciative function, rarity and exteriority, historical a priori, and the archaeological method for tracing the history of ideas, contradictions, comparisons, and scientific knowledge.","The Archeology of Knowledge  \nMichel Foucault  \nCONTENTS .....................................................................................................................2  \nPart I Introduction.................................................................................................................3  \nINTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................3  \nPart II The Discursive Regularities .................................................................................... 11  \n1. THE UNITIES OF DISCOURSE ............................................................................. 11  \n2. DISCURSIVE FORMATIONS.................................................................................. 16  \n3. THE FORMATION OF OBJECTS ..........................................................................20  \n4. THE FORMATION OF ENUNCIATIVE MODALITIES ........................................25  \n5 THE FORMATION OF CONCEPTS........................................................................28  \n6. THE FORMATION OF STRATEGIES.....................................................................33  \n7. REMARKS AND CONSEQUENCES.....................................................................37  \nPart III The Statement and the Archive ..............................................................................41  \n2. THE ENUNCIATIVE FUNCTION ...........................................................................46  \n3. THE DESCRIPTION OF STATEMENTS...............................................................55  \n4. RARITY, EXTERIORITY, ACCUMULATION ......................................................63  \n5 THE HISTORICAL A PRIORI AND THE ARCHIVE ............................................70  \nPart IV Archaeological Description .................................................................................74  \n1. ARCHAEOLOGY AND THE HISTORY OF IDEAS ............................................74  \n2. THE ORIGINAL And THE REGULAR....................................................................78  \n3. CONTRADICTIONS................................................................................................83  \n4. THE COMPARATIVE FACTS .................................................................................86  \n5. CHANGE And TRANSFORMATIONS ..................................................................91  \n6. SCIENCE AND KNOWLEDGE ............................................................................. 100  \nPart Conclusion ................................................................................................................ 109  \nCONCLUSION ............................................................................................................ 109  \nINDEX.......................................................................................................................... 117  \nNote om layout  \n-Ganske rett fram layout, ingen store kompliserte greir her. Sidetall nederst på hver side.  \nArchaeology of Knowledge  \n`Michel Foucault is a very brilliant writer ... he has a remark-able angle of vision, a highly disciplined and coherent one, that informs his work to such a high degree as to make the work sui generis original. '  \nEdward W. Said  \n`The Archaeology of Know/edge ... provides an unusually sharp outline of [Foucault's] theoretical stance as well as a focused critique of the history of ideas. '  \nJean Claude Guedon  \n'A necessary guide to Foucault's often difficult ideas ... and to his overall historical ambition, which is to define the \"soil\" out of which contemporary events in a given period grow. '  \nThe Times Literary Supplement  \n`No other thinker in recent history had so dynamically influenced the fields of history, philosophy, literature and literary theory, the social sciences, even medicine. '  \nLawrence D. Kritzman  \n`Next to Sartre's Search fora Method, and in direct opposition to it, ","cbCaid4yUYVaI9zP","https://ap.wps.com/l/cbCaid4yUYVaI9zP","pdf",788261,4,1,121,"English","en",105,"# Part I Introduction\n# Part II The Discursive Regularities\n## The Unities of Discourse\n## Discursive Formations\n## The Formation of Objects\n## The Formation of Enunciative Modalities\n## The Formation of Concepts\n## The Formation of Strategies\n## Remarks and Consequences\n# Part III The Statement and the Archive\n## The Enunciative Function\n## The Description of Statements\n## Rarity, Exteriority, Accumulation\n## The Historical a priori and the Archive\n# Part IV Archaeological Description\n## Archaeology and the History of Ideas\n## The Original and the Regular\n## Contradictions\n## The Comparative Facts\n## Change and Transformations\n## Science and Knowledge\n# Conclusion\n# Index","[{\"question\":\"What is the central focus of Michel Foucault’s Archaeology of Knowledge?\",\"answer\":\"The book analyzes how discourse is formed and regulated, examining unities of discourse, discursive formations, and the mechanisms that produce objects, concepts, and strategies.\"},{\"question\":\"How does the book approach the study of statements and the archive?\",\"answer\":\"It develops the enunciative function and the description of statements, then addresses rarity, exteriority, accumulation, and the historical a priori as conditions shaping the archive.\"},{\"question\":\"What does “archaeological description” contribute to the history of ideas?\",\"answer\":\"It provides a method for tracing how ideas and knowledge change over time through analysis of originality and regularity, contradictions, comparative facts, and transformations in science and 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