Stuart Elden

The Early Foucault


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Hegel in 1929 and a major, 750-page study of Kierkegaard in 1938, one of the first French engagements with existentialism.19 His Human Existence and Transcendence was published in 1944 but, unlike Jean-Paul Sartre’s work from the previous year, has only recently been translated.20 Wahl was also significant in terms of his engagement with Anglophone work, a textbook on French philosophy, and a general introduction on Philosophies of Existence.21 Wahl ran the Collège philosophique at which Derrida presented ‘Cogito and the History of Madness’ in 1963; and would invite Foucault to give the ‘What is an Author?’ lecture to the Société française de philosophie in 1969.22

      Crucially for Foucault, Wahl taught on Heidegger from the mid 1940s through the 1950s. Derrida recalls that Heidegger was very much a presence at the ENS due to Beaufret and Hyppolite.23 But Wahl’s Sorbonne courses did much more. They were based on both on his reading of published texts, but also his knowledge of Heidegger’s courses of the 1920s and 1930s.24 Despite some reports, Wahl did not attend lectures himself, noting in a letter to Heidegger of December 1937 that he ‘would love to meet with you one day. But all sorts of obstacles stand in the way at present.’25 Foremost among those obstacles was his Jewish heritage, which meant he left Europe during the war. But Wahl certainly had access to notes from Heidegger’s courses.

      Wahl’s introductory course from January to June 1946 discussed Being and Time, but also Heidegger’s work on Kant and his discussion of truth, which as Jean Montenot notes closely parallels Heidegger’s own 1928–9 course at the University of Freiburg Einleitung in die Philosophie [Introduction to Philosophy] (GA27).26 Indeed, it follows Heidegger to such a remarkable degree that as Dominique Janicaud says, it is not so much ‘a course on Heidegger, but a commentary on a course by Heidegger’.27 It was delivered in the academic year before Foucault began University studies, but Defert says that Foucault attended what sounds like a similar course from October 1946.28 A very young Kostas Axelos, newly arrived from Greece, was there for the earlier course, and recalls that Wahl ‘did not read a text written in advance, and only consulted the notes he had with him very occasionally’.29 It seems likely that Foucault attended Wahl’s 1950 course L’Idée d’être chez Heidegger, and possibly the December 1951 to March 1952 course La Pensée de Heidegger et la Poésie de Hölderlin.30

      Two further courses, on the history of metaphysics and philosophy of existence were published in 1951.35 The first of these has a focus on Heidegger’s short book that contained ‘Plato’s Doctrine of Truth’ and the ‘Letter on Humanism’; along with Holzwege. Wahl immediately translates Heidegger’s brief description of what a Holzwege is – a wood path, but also a lost path.36 Wahl also discusses Heidegger’s 1924–5 course on Plato’s Sophist and the first lecture course on Nietzsche from 1936–7 on The Will to Power as Art, unpublished until 1992 and 1961, respectively.37 Foucault either attended this course or had access to its notes.38 Wahl’s subsequent courses included two at the Sorbonne published together as Traité de Métaphysique, though these do not discuss Heidegger as much.39 One notable later course by Wahl was on Introduction to Metaphysics, Heidegger’s 1935–6 lecture course, though not published in German until 1953.40 Wahl’s final course on Heidegger was Mots, mythes et réalité dans la philosophie de Heidegger, published in 1961.41

      Wahl’s access to unpublished material is significant. Beaufret recalls that Alexandre Koyré took a copy of a Heidegger course to France in 1929.42 From Beaufret’s recollection of a passage in the manuscript, in which Heidegger compared Dasein to Leibniz’s monad, this is likely the same course Wahl mentions in his 1947 book Petite histoire de l’existentialisme, in which he too discusses such a passage.43 Although Beaufret’s recollection is not precise, it is likely they mean the summer 1928 course, immediately preceding the Einleitung, published in German in 1978 and translated as The Metaphysical Foundations of Logic. This course is a detailed engagement with Leibniz, and it does have a passage that matches their recollection.44

      Hyppolite was best known for his work on Hegel. He was the translator of the Phenomenology of Spirit, and wrote important works on that text, the Logic and the Philosophy of History.48 Of a slightly earlier generation, Alexandre Kojève’s lectures had begun this French engagement.49 The audience was extraordinary: Althusser, Raymond Aron, Bataille, Blanchot, André Breton, Koyré, Lacan, Henri Lefebvre, Emmanuel Lévinas, Merleau-Ponty, Sartre and many others.50 Hyppolite himself apparently avoided the lectures ‘for fear of being influenced’.51 As John Heckman puts it, ‘the course served as an indispensable preparation for the renewal of serious interest in Hegel after the Second World War. In large part it is fair to say that Kojève created the reading public for Hyppolite’s translation and commentary.’52 Hyppolite also wrote studies on Marx’s early, Hegelian, work,53 and his essays across the history of western philosophy were collected into a wide-ranging collection two years after his death.54 Foucault later recognizes how Wahl and Hyppolite together had made possible a French engagement with Hegel, albeit one that Foucault would attempt to free himself from with the aid of Nietzsche, Bataille and Blanchot (DE#281 IV, 84; EW III, 246).