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Parrēsia
by
Foucault, Michel
in
Ancient philosophy
/ Anger
/ Discourse
/ Flattery
/ Freedom of speech
/ Listening
/ Oratory
/ Philosophers
/ Philosophy
/ Slaves
/ Soul
/ Treatises
2015
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Parrēsia
by
Foucault, Michel
in
Ancient philosophy
/ Anger
/ Discourse
/ Flattery
/ Freedom of speech
/ Listening
/ Oratory
/ Philosophers
/ Philosophy
/ Slaves
/ Soul
/ Treatises
2015
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Journal Article
Parrēsia
2015
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Overview
The obligation to manifest the truth about oneself forms part of the penitential ritual. This is exomologesis, a kind of dramatization of oneself as a sinner, which is realized through clothing, fasting, ordeals, exclusion from the community, standing as a supplicant at the door of the church, and so on. A dramatization of oneself as a sinner, a dramatic expression of oneself as a sinner, by which one acknowledges one is a sinner, but without doing this--at any rate, without necessarily, primarily, or fundamentally doing this-through language: this is exomologesis. Here, Foucault discusses parresia as an obligation.
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