This book, which Foucault himself has judged accurate, is the first to provide a sustained, coherent analysis of the French philosopherβs work as a whole.
To demonstrate the sense in which Foucaultβs work is beyond structuralism and hermeneutics, the authors unfold a careful, analytical exposition of his oeuvre. They argue that Foucault's work during the seventies became a sustained and largely successful effort to develop a new methodββinterpretative analyticsββcapable of explaining both the logic of structuralismβs claim to be an objective science and the apparent validity of the hermeneutical counterclaim that the human sciences can proceed only by understanding the deepest meaning of the subject and his tradition.
βThere are many new secondary sources [on Foucault]. None surpass the book by Hubert Dreyfus and Paul Rabinow . . . The American paperback edition contains Foucaultβs βOn the Genealogy of Ethics,β a lucid interview that is now our best source for seeing how he construed the whole project of the history of sexuality.β βDavid Hoy,Β London Review of Books