Creativity Without a Subject: Foucault’s Grid of Intelligibility
La Grille , Roy’s Foucault. AI image Introduction How should creativity and truth be explained? Do they originate in the capacities of individual subjects, or do they emerge from historically specific conditions that render certain forms of thought possible while excluding others? These questions come into sharp focus in the 1971 exchange between Noam Chomsky and Michel Foucault, though they extend well beyond the circumstances of that encounter. They also run throughout Foucault’s broader work, including his inaugural lecture, The Order of Discourse . One of Foucault’s most distinctive responses to this problem takes the form of what he calls la grille d’intelligibilité —a grid of intelligibility through which knowledge becomes thinkable and articulable. The Subject and the Myth of Discovery Traditional histories of knowledge tend to organize intellectual change around exceptional individuals. Discoveries are attributed to inventors, theories to authors, and breakthroughs to mom...