The Ethopoietic Functionof Writing: how to Write to Masterone’sown Identity. Onthe Basis of The Late Works by Michel Foucault
Streszczenie
The ethopoietic function of writing is a term used to describe the
possibility launched by the process of writing to transform theoretical
truths into ethos — the rule that governs our vita activa. In his writings
Foucault presents the concise, yet detailed, methods of governing and
mastering the Self. Seneca’s hupomnēmata are an example of how to
integrate theoretical knowledge into the very “body” of the Self.
Introducing words into the virtual space between present consciousness
and future unconsciousness increases the distance between “I” and
death; hence, Foucault concludes that “we write so as not to die.”
“Essential affinity between death, endless striving and the selfrepresentation of language” is, in this sense, the condition for the
creation of an identity. I would like to present the ways in which Foucault
assimilates all these paths to make the aesthetics and ethics of our
existence coherent and complete.
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