Literator (May 1990)

Foucault and Shakespeare’s pedants, dotards and drunks

  • J. Gouws

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4102/lit.v11i3.811
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
pp. 29 – 41

Abstract

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Foucault’s claim that the Renaissance organised knowledge in terms of the episteme of resemblance can be challenged in principle and on empirical grounds. I argue that the empirical challenge can be delivered, first, by pointing to three Shakespeare scenes in which the use of analogy as a means of presenting knowledge is repudiated; and, second, by pointing to alternative ways of organising knowledge: classical authority, logic and rhetoric. The “theoretical” challenge must be delivered by questioning Foucault’s presuppositions.