I really enjoyed this article. However, there was a lot of unnecessary word usage in my opinion ;-) (Such as, "Postmodern thought subverts all totalizing theories, metaphysical permanence, transcendental signifieds, objective truths and any claim to indubitable foundations but in the end subverts itself. " He could've easily ended it @ totalizing theories since all of the ideals he states after fall into that).
Perhaps I like it because I'm familar with it. I took a class on Foucault (I wrote about the "Panopticon" from Discipline and Punish) and am quite familar with him (however, we didn't not read the Order of Things... ) Nietzsche is one of my favs'. Postmodernism is my current obsession and I'm in an philosophy in anarchy class in which we are reading, "Society of Spectacle" by Debord. Forgive all the references to classes and schools - but it takes up all my time these days.
I really enjoyed how he linked all the philosophers/great thinkers together. Most articles or readings that I get about Foucault rarely mention the influence Nietzsche had on him, or how many of his ideas he got from him. He also summarized Foucault's ideas well. IE - mostly that everything became a catogory or construction with the birth of capitalism and like most of these thinkers. Capitalism is not just an economic term. It has control over everything (or @ least tries too) even our thoughts.
I also liked him bringing Debord into the spill.
This is exactly why a friend of mine did not like called Debord a postmodernisnt - postmodernist look @ the situation and say, "ohwell, it's all a social construct anyway, nothing you can do." While Deboard, to put it bluntly, thinks we should basically turn to anarchy.


h34r:
