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Hallucinating Foucault (Hardcover)

~ (Author) "THE DREAM UNFOLDS like this..." (more)
Key Phrases: Paul Michel, Jacques Martel, Pascale Vaury (more...)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)

List Price: $21.00
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  Hardcover, November 30, 1996 $16.38 $2.55 $0.01
  Paperback, July 10, 1997 -- $3.16 $0.90

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

An intricate and self-reflective novel about that most delicate of relationships--meaning the one between writers and readers. The narrator, an anonymous graduate student, sets off on the trail of a French novelist named Paul Michel, who is currently confined to an asylum. Engineering his hero's release, the narrator finds himself enmeshed in bizarre love triangle, of which the three vertices are himself, the novelist, and the late Michel Foucault. Sex, it seems, can be made safe, but the oddball intimacy of reading cannot.


From Publishers Weekly

Reading is a solitary act, yet the relationship between reader and writer is eerily intimate, a faraway mind locked in a text reaching out to touch another across a silent chasm. But what happens when an isolated reader is so moved by the writing before him that he feels he must seek out his author and consummate their distant love affair? In her first novel, literary scholar Duncker has crafted a moving, mysterious answer to that question. Her unnamed protagonist is a 22-year-old English university student preparing his thesis on the work of Paul Michel, a brilliant novelist now confined to a French insane asylum. "University libraries are like madhouses, full of people pursuing wraiths, hunches, obsessions," he explains. "The person with whom you spend most of your time is the person you're writing about." Immersing himself in Michel's serene, indifferent prose and searching for clues about the rebellious, uncontrollable man behind the text, the student uncovers Michel's admiration for the transgressive French philosopher Michel Foucault. Urged on by his single-minded girlfriend, the student travels to France, where the tragically insane author and his unseen reader meet for the first time and become inextricably involved in entirely unexpected ways. Blurring the line between the historically real (Foucault) and the invented (Michel), Duncker's writing is oblique and thoughtful, a blend of playful narrative twists and meditations on the act of reading, the nature of fiction and homosexuality and the relationship between love and madness. (Jan.) FYI: Duncker teaches writing, literature and feminist theory at the University of Wales. She was born in the West Indies, educated at Bedales, Oxford and Cambridge, and now divides her time between Wales and France.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 175 pages
  • Publisher: Ecco; 1st edition (December 1, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0880014997
  • ISBN-13: 978-0880014991
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.6 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,067,247 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

More About the Author

Patricia Duncker
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Customer Reviews

26 Reviews
5 star:
 (15)
4 star:
 (7)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (26 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Writer and Read- Classic(?) Love Story, November 3, 1998
By kip24@worldnet.att.net (New Jersey, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hallucinating Foucault (Paperback)
Many novels can hold a reader but very few, the great rare ones, can keep the reader enthralled, fascinated, and eager for every succeeding page. This is one of those rare, beautiful works that restores faith in the power of the novel, the subtle, beguiling beauty of fiction, and confidence that amid the trash being published, there are wonderful, creative new writers. While Michel Foucault, the great French writer and philosopher, is in the title of this book, it is more about the person reading it than about anyone else. Duncker explains the relationship between the writer and the reader so clearly that she also expresses it through her own creative relationship with the person who is reading her work. Hallucinating Foucault shows how a novel can be written simply and clearly while being deeply felt, philosophical, and astounding all at the same time. A wonderful, gorgeous, meaningful book that lingers in the memory long after the final page is turned and the last pieces of the puzzle- and the puzzle here is much more intriguing than those in most of other novels that rely on puzzles- are fit perfectly in place. The title may be somewhat intimidating but from the very first page, Duncker wraps the Reader in prose that makes her book almost impossible to put down.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Intriguing, absorbing, March 31, 1999
All fiction is allegory: it's just a matter of how much each author is willing to go either into what Hawthorne or O'Connor called "romance," or into any other number of less baldly allegorical avenues with their writings. That was brought home to me in a new way with Halluncinating Foucalt. At first I assumed I was reading, basic, contempory, post-modernist fiction. But within the first 50 pages or so I began to realize that Patricia Duncker's characters and plot were deliberately singular. The anonymous narrator; his hysterically funny, intense paramour (equally anonymous, known only because of her study of Schiller, as "The Germanist"); the insane author Paul Michel, whose life long obsession with Foucault is ostensibly the novel's key: are all very subtly drawn symbols of certain types of people, i.e., readers and writers of fiction or philosophy. As the narrative progresses with inevitability and predictability, the charactors become symbols of those genres of writing themselves. Once I realized this, called myself a hopelessly bourgeois pig-man and looked at it again, many things that had begun to annoy me about the book fell into place -- specifically, the narrator's one-dimensionality and some rather heavy-handed plot moves. (The Germanist's history and ultimate role in the plot to liberate the instutionalized Michel, even still, was a strain on the suspension of disbelief.)

Still, once I could look at the novel as deliberately sidestepping many typical narrative mechanisms, I enjoyed it a great deal. Ms. Duncker has written a mystifying book, no matter how you approach it. Its questions about devotion and loyalty and passion and sanity will, as another reader put it, stayed with me long after I put it down and went on to other, more conventional fiction.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Academic Novel for Romantic Post-Structuralists, August 27, 2000
By Noreen O'Connor (Washington, DC USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I sat down to read _Hallucinating Foucault_ one sleepy evening and became to engrossed I could not stop reading until I finished a couple energizing hours later. Duncker makes my brain work. She brilliantly brings forth the human side of late twentieth century post-structural philosophy and post-modern literature, binding the reader into a love triangle that's both solid and ethereal. What does the reader bring to the text? What sort of relationship does the reader have with the writer? What happens if the reader really does go to seek the author--who isn't dead after all--and blends his intellectual dream with "reality"? As a doctoral student, my favorite thing about this book is that the plot has the best possible happy ending--the protag. finishes his diss. and gets a job!! This is better than Byatt's _Possession_ and up there with Winterson's _The Passion_ for me.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Hallucinating Real Literature
This is a magnificent little book that may put one in mind of Byatt's *Possession.* Tightly plotted, HF is a marvelous piece of evidence for the proposition that (a) it's still... Read more
Published on August 3, 2006 by Wendell Ricketts

5.0 out of 5 stars A beautiful story
This story I found to be literally beautiful: beautifully conceived, beautifully written, and describing the beautiful world that opens up each time we perform a written text... Read more
Published on February 28, 2006 by Andrew Fookes

4.0 out of 5 stars A fine little novel.
Patricia Duncker, Hallucinating Foucault (Ecco, 1996)

Duncker's first novel gives us the story of the narrator, who remains anonymous throughout, a graduate student... Read more
Published on January 12, 2006 by Robert P. Beveridge

5.0 out of 5 stars Love song
The famous French novelist Paul Michel lived a glamorously unconstrained life, much like his books, until the death of Michel Foucault in 1984. Read more
Published on February 12, 2004 by blissengine

4.0 out of 5 stars Scholarly madness
Patricia Duncker's HALLUCINATING FOUCAULT explores the relationship between scholar and subject matter, reader and writer, mentor and protégé - and the madness that connects them... Read more
Published on May 1, 2003 by Debbie Lee Wesselmann

5.0 out of 5 stars I'm not sure if I was reading the book or experiencing it!!!
I am an avid reader and its not often that I now have the time to read. But this book, which I picked up more becasue of my love for France, turned out to be one of the best buys... Read more
Published on December 3, 2002 by Galerie Moutarde

4.0 out of 5 stars a little disturbing
This is one of the most intriguing books I have ever read. It explores the underrated relationship between reader and writer by setting up a story in which a PhD student makes a... Read more
Published on July 13, 2002 by nausicaa22

2.0 out of 5 stars I don't know
I want to feel guilty about giving it only two stars when almost everybody else gave it a five. Two stars for the clarity of the language, at least. Read more
Published on December 27, 2001 by mar-vic cagurangan

5.0 out of 5 stars who IS Paul Michel?
i have searched my local college library, the internet, other people, and have concluded that either there is no Paul Michel, that he is of a different name, or that paul michel... Read more
Published on March 5, 2001 by Reid W. Wyatt

3.0 out of 5 stars Meeting Our Hero
About a third of the reader's way into it, this novel becomes as entertaining as a holiday train ride into a splendid and previously unviewed landscape. Read more
Published on June 18, 2000 by mgerald

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