item: #1 of 129 id: fous-1406 author: Raffnsøe, Sverre; Rosenberg, Alan; Beaulieu, Alain; Rabinowitz, Morris; Turner, Kevin title: A New Beginning and a Continuation… date: 2008-01-04 words: 1705 flesch: 46 summary: Foucault  Studies  aspires  to  be  an  organ  for  the  advancement  of  Foucault’s thought through a continuously revived critical reception.  According to the Social Sciences Citation Index, Foucault was in  2004 and the two following years the most quoted thinker to live after World War II,  outranking Bourdieu, Giddens, Habermas, Latour, Beck, Derrida, and Deleuze. keywords: foucault; journal; new; studies cache: fous-1406.pdf plain text: fous-1406.txt item: #2 of 129 id: fous-1407 author: OʹLeary, Timothy title: Foucault, Experience, Literature date: 2008-01-04 words: 11048 flesch: 51 summary: In  that  book,  experience is finally presented as the historical mode in which being is given to us as  “something  that can and must be  thought,”8 while,  in his very  last  lecture at  the  Collège de France, Foucault can still speak in terms of the Christian experience and  the  modern  European  experience  of  philosophy.9  Experience  is  then,  a  limit‐ transcending, challenging event, but also the dominant historical structure which is  to  be  challenged.  18 O’Leary: Foucault, Experience, Literature  feature which gives  them  their  transformative power,  is  the fact  that  they are not  only  descriptions  of  the  past,  but  attempts  to  modify  the  present  through  a  transformation, or a fictioning, of experience. keywords: book; experience; forms; foucault; history; knowledge; literature; madness; thought; way; work cache: fous-1407.pdf plain text: fous-1407.txt item: #3 of 129 id: fous-1408 author: Brich, Cecile title: The Groupe d’information sur les prisons: The voice of prisoners? Or Foucault’s? date: 2008-01-04 words: 10228 flesch: 42 summary: In  the  same  interview,  Foucault  repeats  that  the  GIP  intellectuals  did  not  intend  to  remain  silent  and  let  prisoners  alone  speak  –  contrary  to  earlier  GIP  pronouncements:   What we tried to do with the prison issue was  Deleuze  reports  that  Foucault  felt  the  GIP  had  achieved nothing.57 In this section I review the key strengths and weaknesses of the  GIP’s  strategy,  and  I  argue  that  the  failure  of  the  GIP  can  be  attributed  to  its  imposition  of  a  hegemonic  discourse  on  prisoners,  defining  subject  positions  for  them which they neither wanted to nor could adopt.  keywords: answers; discourse; foucault; gip; intellectuals; knowledge; les; op.cit; power; prisoners; prisons; questionnaire; translation cache: fous-1408.pdf plain text: fous-1408.txt item: #4 of 129 id: fous-1409 author: Donzelot, Jacques; Gordon, Colin title: Governing Liberal Societies – the Foucault Effect in the English‐speaking World date: 2008-01-04 words: 7068 flesch: 38 summary: In the two volumes of his lectures of 1978 and 1979, we see Michel Foucault  making a major intellectual change of direction, moving away from an analysis of  power  as  the  formation  and  production  of  individuals  towards  an  analysis  of  governmentality, a concept invented to denote the ‘conduct of conducts’ of men and  women, working  through  their autonomy rather  than  through coercion even of a  subtle  kind.  So  what accounts for this singular success of Foucault’s reflection on governmentality in  the Anglo‐Saxon world?    CG:  We had a few advantages in Britain. keywords: analysis; foucault; governmentality; lectures; liberalism; neoliberalism; power; social; society; state; studies; work cache: fous-1409.pdf plain text: fous-1409.txt item: #5 of 129 id: fous-1410 author: Tietäväinen, Antti; Pyykkönen, Miikka; Kaisto, Jani title: Globalization and Power ‐ Governmentalization of Europe? An Interview with William Walters date: 2008-01-04 words: 5445 flesch: 54 summary: In many cases what they are doing  is harmonizing  the relations  between states or regulating transactions between states  so that perhaps extended  economic and social spaces become more viable.    Q:  Let’s speak of the development of what Blair and Anthony Giddens call the ‘third way’  and what Nikolas Rose analyses in his texts of the  late 1990s as a continuum of the process  that Foucault calls ‘the governmentalization of state’.  In  the  book  Governing  Europe  we  talked  about  the  governmentalization  of  Europe, which is again, and among other things, a way of distinguishing our project  from  the  mainstream  of  EU  studies  where  the  theme  of  the  Europeanization  of  government or state has become so popular.  keywords: european; foucault; kind; practices; security; state; things; way cache: fous-1410.pdf plain text: fous-1410.txt item: #6 of 129 id: fous-1411 author: Beaulieu, Alain; Fillion, Réal title: Michel Foucault, History of Madness, translated by Jonathan Murphy and Jean Khalfa (London/New York: Routledge, 2006) date: 2008-01-04 words: 7733 flesch: 44 summary: 74‐89, January 2008    REVIEW ESSAY    Michel Foucault, History of Madness, translated by Jonathan Murphy  and  Jean  Khalfa  (London/New  York:  Routledge,  2006)  the review History of the Human Sciences.5 After the publication of History of Madness,  there  was  again  renewed  debate  about  the  thoroughness  of  Foucault’s  historical  analyses and his arbitrary criticism of the Enlightenment.6  In  what  way  can  this  be  considered  a  founding  work?  keywords: derrida; folie; foucault; history; madness; michel; new; psychiatric; reason; text; work cache: fous-1411.pdf plain text: fous-1411.txt item: #7 of 129 id: fous-1412 author: Tierney, Thomas F. title: Michel Foucault, Security, Territory, Population: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1977‐78 Edited by Michel Senellart. Translated by Graham Burchell. (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007.) date: 2008-01-04 words: 4848 flesch: 38 summary: He  traced  the  origins  of  the  pastorate  to  the  shepherd‐flock  model  of  leadership  that  was  “frequently  found  throughout the Mediterranean East, … in Egypt, Assyria, Mesopotamia, and above  all, of course, in the Hebrews,”20 and spent nearly an entire lecture making the case  that the Greeks, particularly Plato, did not embrace the idea of a political leader as a  shepherd.21 However, Foucault was quite emphatic about the role that the pastorate  played in Christianity:  I think the real history of the pastorate as the source of a specific type of power over men,  as a model and matrix of procedures for the government of men, really only begins with  Christianity. …  The pastorate begins with a process that is absolutely unique in history  and  no  other  example  of  which  is  found  in  the  history  of  any  other  civilization:  the  process by which a religion, a religious community, constitutes itself as a Church, that is  to say, as an institution that claims to govern men in their daily life on the grounds of  leading them to eternal life in the other world, and to do this not only on the scale of a  definite group, of a city of a state, but of the whole of humanity.22    He  discussed  the  development  of  the  Christian  pastorate  in  great  detail,  distinguishing it not only from the Eastern and Hebraic traditions, but from Greek  techniques of the self as well.23 I will have to pass over that discussion here, however,  in order to focus on what I take to be the most important point Foucault made about  the pastorate, which is that it was contested throughout its history.  According to Foucault, Europe was created at this point on the basis of a  new “military‐diplomatic apparatus” that was comprised of three instruments: the  use  of  war  as  a  diplomatic  technique  (citing  Clausewitz  without  inversion);  permanent diplomatic relations based on the principle of a “physics of states”; and  professional, scientifically trained armies.41              What Foucault outlined thus far in the course, therefore, was a very similar  process that occurred both within, and among, states. keywords: course; foucault; ibid; lectures; new; police; population; security cache: fous-1412.pdf plain text: fous-1412.txt item: #8 of 129 id: fous-1413 author: Brich, Cecile title: Brent Pickett, On the Use and Abuse of Foucault for Politics (Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2005) date: 2008-01-04 words: 1108 flesch: 44 summary: Brent Pickett, On the Use and Abuse of Foucault for Politics (Maryland: Lexington, 2005) Foucault Studies   © Cecile Brich 2008 ISSN: 1832‐5203 Foucault Studies, No 5, pp.  In various other  statements, however, Foucault does not altogether oppose democratic practices, so that  Pickett  contends  that  there  also  exists  a  ”Modern  Foucault”.  keywords: foucault; pickett cache: fous-1413.pdf plain text: fous-1413.txt item: #9 of 129 id: fous-1414 author: Carlson, David Lee title: Jeremy W. Crampton and Stuart Elden (eds.), Space, Knowledge and Power: Foucault and Geography (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007) date: 2008-01-04 words: 1707 flesch: 41 summary: For example, the  editors of Hérodote assert in their response to Foucault’s questions that while there is no  fluid whole to power, strategy involves the topography of the “knowing‐how‐to think‐ space”.9 Moreover, Brabant argues in response to Foucault’s question about power that  “what characterizes power  is the way that  its  internal complexity goes hand  in hand  with a multiform intervention on the place of space”’,10  Racine and Raffestin state in  response to Foucault’s question about science that “Geographers no longer begin with  science, but with  ‘popular knowledge’”,  in order  to “produce a counter‐discourse of  possible alternatives”.11   The purpose of doing so, they contend,  is to allow for more  “democratic control” over the “production of their space”, which, in their view, is the  4    Eribon, Michel Foucault, 230.  5   Ibid., 230.   6    Groupe d’Information sur les Prisons.  7    Eribon, Michel Foucault, 234.   8    Ibid., 224.   9    Crampton and  Elden, Space, Knowledge and Power,24.   10   Ibid., 25.  11   Ibid., 32.   12   Ibid., 32.   13   Ibid., 133.  14   Ibid., 24.  109  Carlson: Review of Space, Knowledge and Power  “sole criteria [sic] of truth”.12  Thinking of discourses, action, and knowledge within and  throughout spaces can be a very useful way to look at Foucault’s works.  Space, Knowledge and Power: Foucault and Geography Foucault Studies   © David Lee Carlson 2008 ISSN: 1832‐5203 Foucault Studies, No 5, pp. 108‐111, January 2008   REVIEW    Jeremy  W.  Crampton  and  Stuart  Elden  (eds.),  Space,  Knowledge  and  Power:  Foucault  and  Geography  (Aldershot:  Ashgate,  2007).  keywords: foucault; knowledge; power; space cache: fous-1414.pdf plain text: fous-1414.txt item: #10 of 129 id: fous-1415 author: Comstock, Edward title: Shelley Tremain (ed.), Foucault and the Government of Disability (Ann Arbor, MI: The University of Michigan Press, 2005) date: 2008-01-04 words: 2384 flesch: 24 summary: The collection of essays that comprise Foucault and the Government of Disability…………… Foucault Studies   © Edward Comstock 2008 ISSN: 1832‐5203 Foucault Studies, No 5, pp.  ISBN 0‐472‐06876‐8    The  essays  that  comprise Foucault and  the Government of Disability  represent  a  cross‐ disciplinary approach to writing Michel Foucault into the burgeoning cross‐disciplinary  field of “disability studies.”  keywords: disability; foucauldian; foucault; kind cache: fous-1415.pdf plain text: fous-1415.txt item: #11 of 129 id: fous-1416 author: DeAngelis, Peter title: C. G. Prado, Searle and Foucault on Truth (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006) date: 2008-01-04 words: 2127 flesch: 43 summary: In Searle and Foucault on Truth, C. G. Prado continues  the efforts at a rapprochement  between Continental and analytic philosophy begun in his earlier works, Starting with  Foucault:  An  Introduction  to  Genealogy1  and  A  House  Divided:  Comparing  Analytic  and  Continental  Philosophy.2  In  Starting  with  Foucault,  Prado’s  audience  is  comprised  of  analytic  philosophers  who,  with  few  exceptions,  have  largely  dismissed  Foucault,  considering him not to be a philosopher at all, much less one who has anything of value  to say to them about philosophical theories of truth and knowledge.3 Accordingly, that  work  offers  an  introduction  to  Foucault  via  his  genealogical  texts  with  a  focus  on  Foucault’s ideas on truth, knowledge, the subject, and rationality and, moreover, how  they are products of power relations.  In  Searle  and  Foucault  on  Truth, Prado stays with  the related  themes of  truth and realism, except  that now he  narrows  his  focus  to  a  specific  comparison  between  Foucault’s  views  and  those  of  analytic philosopher  John Searle. keywords: foucault; prado; searle cache: fous-1416.pdf plain text: fous-1416.txt item: #12 of 129 id: fous-1417 author: Malette, Sébastien title: Sergei Prozorov, Foucault, Freedom and Sovereignty (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007) date: 2008-01-04 words: 2188 flesch: 34 summary: On the contrary, the  subject  for Prozorov  is precisely  the being which  is  ‘beside  its own diagrammatic  identity’, a being which  indicates  through  its persisting resistance  to any  form of  enclosure  that  what  is  at  stake  in  the  affirmation  of  freedom  is  not  identity  or  124 Malette: Review of Foucault, Freedom and Sovereignty  authenticity,  but  rather  the  human  potentiality  of  being  otherwise.  For  Prozorov, it is in the interstice of Foucault’s poststructuralism and Schmitt’s political  realism  that  we  may  draw  the  relation  between  the  diagram  and  its  sovereign  foundation  in  terms  of  freedom.  keywords: foucault; freedom; prozorov; subject cache: fous-1417.pdf plain text: fous-1417.txt item: #13 of 129 id: fous-1418 author: Marcus, Paul title: Valerie Harwood, Diagnosing ‘Disorderly’ Children: A Critique of Behaviour Disorders Discourses (London: Routledge, 2006) date: 2008-01-04 words: 1169 flesch: 36 summary: Harwood  focuses her analysis on Foucault’s “three elements of experience” as  they relate to what we take to be conduct disorders: first, “games of truth,” how the  concepts of disorderly children and conduct disorder have garnered the status of the  scientific discourse through the fields of psychiatry and education; second, “relations of  power,” how “conduct disorder” can function as authoritative knowledge of children  and  young  people,  using  the  prestige  of  psychiatry  and  education  to  enable  the  diagnosing of conduct disorder; third, how the concept of ‘technologies of the self” can  show us how mentally disordered subjectivity is constituted.  Harwood’s  study  would  have  been  more  robust  if  she  provided more and better nuanced phenomenological description, “dense description,”  of  what  it  feels  like  to  be  viewed  as  conduct  disordered  by  the  experts  and,  consequently, by oneself. keywords: children; conduct; harwood cache: fous-1418.pdf plain text: fous-1418.txt item: #14 of 129 id: fous-1419 author: Martens, Stéphanie B. title: Gary Gutting (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Foucault, 2nd edition (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005) date: 2008-01-04 words: 2378 flesch: 41 summary: Cours au Collège de France 1976  (Paris: Gallimard/Seuil, 1997); Michel Foucault, Les Anormaux.  Gallimard/Seuil, 1999); Michel Foucault, L’Herméneutique du sujet. keywords: foucault; history; michel; new cache: fous-1419.pdf plain text: fous-1419.txt item: #15 of 129 id: fous-1420 author: McCall, Corey title: Johanna Oksala, Foucault on Freedom. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006) date: 2008-01-04 words: 2366 flesch: 47 summary: 6 Michel Foucault, “The Thought of the Outside,” Essential Works of Foucault 1954-1984, Volume 2: Aesthetics, Method, and Epistemology (NY: New Press, 1997), p. 167. 139 McCall: Review of Foucault on Freedom In  the  third and  final section of  the book, Oksala  takes up  the question of ethics  in  relation to freedom.  Foucault  1 Hubert Dreyfus and Paul Rabinow, Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics, 2nd. keywords: foucault; freedom; oksala; subject cache: fous-1420.pdf plain text: fous-1420.txt item: #16 of 129 id: fous-1421 author: Milchman, Alan title: Lessico Di Biopolitica, introduzione di Ottavio Marzocca (manifestolibri, la nuova talpa, 2006); Ottavio Marzocca, Perché Il Governo: Il Laboratorio Etico‐Politico Di Foucault (manifestolibri, la nuova talpa, 2007) date: 2008-01-04 words: 1376 flesch: 29 summary: Marzocca’s own volume, Perché  Il Governo,  is an  important contribution  to  the  growing  number  of  studies  that  explore  the  various  dimensions  of  Foucault’s  understanding of “governmentality,” and the genealogy of the forms of government of  human beings.  In the only course at the Collège so far published from this last cycle, The  Hermeneutics of the Subject, Marzocca finds in Foucault’s journey to Greece, and his focus  on  parrhesia,  a  new  and  different  possibility  of  government,  and  a  prospect  for  “desubjectification” [desoggettivazione] (p.205). keywords: foucault; marzocca; power cache: fous-1421.pdf plain text: fous-1421.txt item: #17 of 129 id: fous-1422 author: Protevi, John title: Martin Fuglsang and Bent Meier Sørensen (eds.), Deleuze and the Social (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2006) date: 2008-01-04 words: 1190 flesch: 35 summary: As with all  such images, it would be an exaggeration to say that Foucault begins on the  inside  (of  discursive  practices,  of  institutions)  and  seeks  freedom,  the  outside  (of  thought), whereas Deleuze begins with  the outside, with  lines of flight, and seeks  to  show how insides are formed (as strata or residues).  While one could attempt to construct a Foucaultian  145 Foucault Studies, No 5, pp. 145‐147  ontology of the social – the categories by which human reality is constructed – we also  need  to  acknowledge  Foucault’s  hesitancy  to  use  philosophical  terms  in  the  straightforward way in which Deleuze uses them.  keywords: control; deleuze; foucault cache: fous-1422.pdf plain text: fous-1422.txt item: #18 of 129 id: fous-1423 author: Webb, Philip title: Eyal Chowers. The Modern Self in the Labyrinth: Politics and the Entrapment Imagination (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2005) date: 2008-01-04 words: 2238 flesch: 43 summary: But  is  there  a  usefulness  in  categorizing  this  group  of  thinkers  and,  more  importantly,  the  nature  of  modernity,  as  a  period  of  entrapment?  Whether  ideology,  discourse,  habitus,  etc.,  entrapment  is  an  integral  part  of  critiques  of  modernity. keywords: chowers; entrapment; foucault; modernity; self cache: fous-1423.pdf plain text: fous-1423.txt item: #19 of 129 id: fous-1425 author: Brady, Michelle title: Helen O’Grady, Woman’s Relationship with Herself: Gender, Foucault and Therapy (London & New York: Routledge, 2005), ISBN 0415331269. date: 2008-01-01 words: 1439 flesch: 31 summary: O’Grady’s engagement with Foucault’s Discipline and Punish  extends the existing Foucauldian feminist  literature by analyzing the specific way  that psychological therapy or counselling  is frequently  implicated  in perpetuating                                                    7     Ibid: 43  8     Ibid: 19  9     Ibid: 122  10    Ibid: 9  11    Ibid: 83  12    Ibid.  That, said, the detailed  examination of self‐policing  in Woman’s Relationship with Herself provides grounds  for  future  feminist  engagements  on  the  relationship  between  normalization  and  women’s practices of self.     keywords: foucault; relationship; self‐policing cache: fous-1425.pdf plain text: fous-1425.txt item: #20 of 129 id: fous-2464 author: Raffnsøe, Sverre; Rosenberg, Alan; Beaulieu, Alain; Binkley, Sam; Kristensen, Jens Erik; Opitz, Sven; Rabinowitz, Morris; Holm, Ditte Vilstrup title: Neoliberal Governmentality date: 2009-02-01 words: 1682 flesch: 33 summary: We  strongly  encourage  our  readers  to  submit  articles  that  explore  Foucault’s  conceptuality, comparative works  involving Foucault’s thought, critical essays studying the  impact of Foucault on various fields of study, empirical works using some of Foucault’s ideas,  as well as critical works that involve material recently published, such as Foucault’s seminars  at the Collège de France or Foucault’s complementary thesis on Kant.     Foucault Studies is a forum committed to new approaches to Foucault’s thoughts, and thus we  are especially interested in attracting young, promising scholars to publish their articles in the  Journal.  The  Journal  is experimental  in  its  format as we are striving  to make  it  the best publication on  Foucault’s  thinking,  but  unfortunately  our  ambitions  have  not  always  met  our  or  our  contributors’ expectations. keywords: foucault; governmentality; issue; studies cache: fous-2464.pdf plain text: fous-2464.txt item: #21 of 129 id: fous-2465 author: Read, Jason title: A Genealogy of Homo-Economicus: Neoliberalism and the Production of Subjectivity date: 2009-02-01 words: 6033 flesch: 40 summary: Neoliberalism is a discourse and practice that is aimed to curtail the powers of labor that are distri- buted across all of society—at the exact moment in which all of social existence be- comes labor, or potential labor, neoliberalism constructs the image of a society of ca- pitalists, of entrepreneurs. It is in confronting neoliberalism that the seemingly abstract debates of the last thirty years, debates between poststructuralists such as Michel Foucault and neo-Marxists such as Antonio Negri about the nature of power and the relation between “ideolo- gies” or “discourses” and material existence, cease to be abstract doctrines and be- come concrete ways of comprehending and transforming the present. keywords: capital; foucault; labor; marx; neoliberalism; new; power; production; society; subjectivity cache: fous-2465.pdf plain text: fous-2465.txt item: #22 of 129 id: fous-2471 author: Hamann, Trent H. title: Neoliberalism, Governmentality, and Ethics date: 2009-02-01 words: 11234 flesch: 40 summary: On the other hand it seems that a number of Foucault’s descriptions of nineteenth-century society and government find echoes in contemporary society, such as docile bodies being subject to continuous training and judgment, or the poor being criminalized Foucault Studies, No 6, pp. How is it, to return to the last of the three concerns raised above, that Foucault does not simply lend technical sup- port to neoliberal forms of subjectivation? keywords: conduct; economicus; ethics; forms; foucault; governmentality; homo; individuals; knowledge; neoliberalism; new; power; practices; self; subject; truth; work cache: fous-2471.pdf plain text: fous-2471.txt item: #23 of 129 id: fous-2472 author: Binkley, Sam title: The Work of Neoliberal Governmentality: Temporality and Ethical Substance in the Tale of Two Dads date: 2009-02-01 words: 8916 flesch: 36 summary: How is the work one performs on residual du- rational temporalities, the ethical substances of social conduct, or the residual in- scriptions of Donzelot’s “unwilled collective reality” to be practiced differently? What I have described here as the residual temporalities of social conduct that appear as ethical substances in the work of neoliberal governmentality, share important features with such subjugated knowledges: to do the work of neoliberal governmentality diffe- rently is to engage differently the sedimented memory of social time that is the ethi- cal substance of neoliberal governmentality, to engage this trace, not through a prac- tice of disaggregation and responsibilization, but through a reactivation and redep- loyment of the “unwilled collective reality” that is the fabric of social time. keywords: conduct; dad; donzelot; foucault; governmentality; life; power; practices; self; social; state; temporality; time; work cache: fous-2472.pdf plain text: fous-2472.txt item: #24 of 129 id: fous-2473 author: Milchman, Alan title: Timothy Rayner, Foucault’s Heidegger: Philosophy and Transformative Experience (New York: Continuum, 2007), ISBN 978-0-8264-9486-3 date: 2009-02-01 words: 1774 flesch: 38 summary: Rayner’s point of departure is Foucault’s own claim, in his final interview, “The Return of Morality,” that: “For me Heidegger has always been the essential philosopher.” (p. 35) Before elaborating on this hypothesis, it is important to point out that Rayner has already told his readers that his approach “does not centrally involve comparing and contrasting Foucault and Heidegger’s work,” with the risk that such an approach entails of providing “a reductively Heideggerian (and thus misrepresentative) reading of Foucault ….”(p. keywords: foucault; heidegger; rayner cache: fous-2473.pdf plain text: fous-2473.txt item: #25 of 129 id: fous-2474 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2474.htm plain text: fous-2474.txt item: #26 of 129 id: fous-2475 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2475.htm plain text: fous-2475.txt item: #27 of 129 id: fous-2476 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2476.htm plain text: fous-2476.txt item: #28 of 129 id: fous-2477 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2477.htm plain text: fous-2477.txt item: #29 of 129 id: fous-2478 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2478.htm plain text: fous-2478.txt item: #30 of 129 id: fous-2479 author: Jolley, Mike title: Jeffrey. T Nealon, Foucault Beyond Foucault: Power and its Intensifications since 1984 (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2008), ISBN 9780804757027 date: 2009-02-01 words: 1957 flesch: 48 summary: In Foucault Beyond Foucault Nealon draws out some of the most important and often ignored aspects of Foucault’s approach to power. 10 In his discussion of Von Justi’s ap- proach to this concept, Foucault states, “He [Von Justi] perfectly defines what I feel to be the aim of the modern art of government, or state rationality, namely, to develop those elements constitutive of individuals’ lives in such a way that their development also fosters the strength of the state. keywords: biopower; discussion; foucault; nealon; power cache: fous-2479.pdf plain text: fous-2479.txt item: #31 of 129 id: fous-2480 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2480.htm plain text: fous-2480.txt item: #32 of 129 id: fous-2481 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2481.htm plain text: fous-2481.txt item: #33 of 129 id: fous-2482 author: Hamann, Trent H. title: Edward F. McGushin, Foucault’s Askesis: An Introduction to the Philosophical Life (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2007). ISBN: 9780810122833 date: 2009-02-01 words: 2195 flesch: 46 summary: Relying to a significant extent on Foucault’s lectures at the Collège de France (most of which were either unpublished or not translated at the time he was writing), McGushin’s history makes good use of Foucault’s blend of philosophical reading techniques, derived from both ancient and modern practices. What holds together the diversity of Foucault’s readings, which span a period of four decades, is McGushin’s re-reading of Foucault’s earlier archaeological and genealogical writings on modern forms of power/knowledge through the lens of his later work on subjectivity, the ethical care of the self and aesthetics of existence.1 1 keywords: foucault; mcgushin; philosophy; self cache: fous-2482.pdf plain text: fous-2482.txt item: #34 of 129 id: fous-2483 author: Feder, Ellen K title: Margaret A. McLaren, Feminism, Foucault, and Embodied Subjectivity (Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 2007). ISBN: 0791455149 date: 2009-02-01 words: 2060 flesch: 39 summary: McLaren here, as elsewhere in her wide-ranging book, is entering lightly trodden conceptual ground,7 anticipating and inspiring the rich de- velopment of work in this area of feminist Foucault studies which would follow in subsequent years.8 The new direction of Foucault’s analysis marked by the second and third vo- lumes of The History of Sexuality comes to define, McLaren writes, a different concep- tion of subjectivity, one that “ruins” or “rejects” not the concept of the subject itself, but rather, as McLaren puts it, “a particular formation of it,” This analysis is notable not only for its contribution to feminist applications of Foucault, but to the development of Foucault studies more generally. 6 3 McLaren, Feminism, Foucault, and Embodied Subjectivity, 21. 4 Michel Foucault, “What is Critique?” keywords: feminism; foucault; mclaren; subjectivity; work cache: fous-2483.pdf plain text: fous-2483.txt item: #35 of 129 id: fous-2484 author: Means, Alex title: Mitchell Dean, Governing Societies: Political Perspectives on Domestic and International Rule (New York: Open University Press, 2007). ISBN: 0335208975 date: 2009-02-01 words: 1981 flesch: 32 summary: In Governing Societies he moves away from the more systematized “analytics of government” approach developed within his previous work and instead embarks on a detailed engagement with the political di- mension of liberal powers. This represents an attempt to extend governmentality beyond concerns with the “conduct of conduct”, which he locates as only one potential zone of liberal power. keywords: dean; foucault; governmentality; societies cache: fous-2484.pdf plain text: fous-2484.txt item: #36 of 129 id: fous-2485 author: O’Leary, Timothy title: Paying Attention to Foucault’s Roussel. Michel Foucault, Death and the Labyrinth: The World of Raymond Roussel. Translated by Charles Ruas. Introduction by James Faubion. Postscript by John Ashbery (London: Continuum, 2006) ISBN: 0826464351 date: 2009-02-01 words: 4322 flesch: 58 summary:  Timothy O’Leary 141  Timothy O’Leary 2009 ISSN: 1832-5203 Foucault Studies, No 6, pp. 141-148, February 2009 REVIEW Paying Attention to Foucault’s Roussel Michel Foucault, Death and the Labyrinth: The World of Raymond Roussel. 3 See this volume, “An Interview with Michel Foucault”, 187. 4 Michel Foucault, “The preface to Transgression” and “The Thought of the Out- side”, both in Essential Works of Michel Foucault 1954-1984, Volume 2, Aesthetics, Method and Epistemology, edited by James D. Faubion (London: Penguin, 2000). keywords: book; foucault; language; roussel; things; words; work cache: fous-2485.pdf plain text: fous-2485.txt item: #37 of 129 id: fous-2487 author: Tellmann, Ute title: Foucault and the Invisible Economy date: 2009-02-01 words: 9671 flesch: 44 summary: Instead, Foucault directs our attention to the interplay between a milieu and the wills and interests of the subjects by which “one tries to affect the popula- tion.” 31 Certainly, as Foucault states, within the security-dispositif, the “multiplicity of individuals is no longer pertinent, the population is. Foucault sought to understand the very boundary between the spheres of politics and economy as a specific epistemological construction: “Political economy was im- portant, even in its theoretical formulation, inasmuch as (and only inasmuch as, but this is clearly a great deal) it points out to the government where it had to go to find the principle of truth of its own governmental practice.” keywords: economic; economy; foucault; governmentality; hayek; invisibility; knowledge; liberalism; market; political; politics; population; security; state cache: fous-2487.pdf plain text: fous-2487.txt item: #38 of 129 id: fous-2634 author: Kingston, Mark title: Subversive Friendships: Foucault on Homosexuality and Social Experimentation date: 2009-09-07 words: 5937 flesch: 45 summary: Although, as I argued earlier, relationships between men are often highly normalised, homosexual relationships take place in a ”marginal” space that exists beyond the boundaries of conventional masculine culture, where the norms that would otherwise govern relationships between men do not apply.5 Homosexual relationships therefore need to be created rather than derived from an existing tradition. Rather, the norms that apply to homosexual relationships are fewer and constitute an inadequate guide to creating an actual relationship. keywords: culture; foucault; friendship; homosexuality; new; norms; relationships cache: fous-2634.pdf plain text: fous-2634.txt item: #39 of 129 id: fous-2635 author: Taylor, Chloë title: Pornographic Confessions? Sex Work and Scientia Sexualis in Foucault and Linda Williams date: 2009-09-07 words: 12670 flesch: 42 summary: Williams’ use of Foucault has gone unquestioned in Film and Porn Studies and has been cited and of Michel Foucault (University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996), 99-135; Vikki Bell, Interrogating Incest: Feminism, Foucault and the Law (London and New York: Routledge, 1993); Ann J. Cahill, ‚Foucault, Rape, and the Construction of the Feminine Body,‛ Hypatia, 15, vol., no. 1, (Winter 2000); Ann J. Cahill, Rethinking Rape (Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 2001); Laura Hengehold, ‚An Immodest Proposal: Foucault, Hysterization, and the ‘Second Rape,’‛ in Hypatia, (Summer 1994): 88- 107; Monique Plaza, ‚Our Damages and Their Compensation,‛ Feminist Issues, 1 (3), ([1978], 1981): 5-35; Chloë Taylor, ‚Foucault, Feminism and Sex Crimes,‛ in Hypatia, vol. keywords: acts; confessions; desires; female; foucault; history; men; pleasure; pornography; prostitution; sciences; sexualities; sexuality; truth; williams; women cache: fous-2635.pdf plain text: fous-2635.txt item: #40 of 129 id: fous-2636 author: Taylor, Dianna title: Normativity and Normalization date: 2009-09-07 words: 8934 flesch: 38 summary: 28 James Tulley, ‚To Think and Act Differently: Foucault’s Four Reciprocal Objections to Habermas’ Theory,‛ in Foucault Contra Habermas, eds. I justified my claim in part by asserting that Foucault’s elucidation of the power effects and contingency of particular social norms (such as sex and gender), 1 Michel Foucault, ‚Power, Moral Values, and the Intellectual.‛ Interview wit h Michael Bess (November 3, 1980), IMEC (Institut Mémoirs de l’Édition Contemporaine) Archive folder number FCL2. keywords: discourse; foucault; freedom; habermas; ibid; norm; normalization; normalizing; normativity; power; work cache: fous-2636.pdf plain text: fous-2636.txt item: #41 of 129 id: fous-2637 author: Alessandrini, Anthony C. title: The Humanism Effect: Fanon, Foucault, and Ethics without Subjects date: 2009-09-07 words: 9306 flesch: 45 summary: But in his writings on Barbin, as well as in the later volumes of The History of Sexuality itself, Butler locates a contradictory impulse, ‚an unacknowledged emancipatory ideal that proves 5 A slightly earlier version of some of Butler’s key arguments regarding Foucault’s work appear in her article ‚Foucault and the Paradox of Bodily Inscriptions,‛ The Journal of Philosophy 86 (1989), 601-07. For some sense of the critical background on Butler’s readings of Foucault, see: John Carvalho, ‚Subtle Bodies and the Other Jouissance,‛ SubStance 118 (2009), 112-28; Samuel A. Chambers, ‚‘Sex’ and the Problem of the Body: Reconstructing Judith Butler’s Theory of Sex/Gender,‛ Body and Society 13 (2007), 47-75; David Dudrick, ‚Foucault, Butler, and the Body,‛ European Journal of Philosophy 13 (2005), 226-46; Jeremy Moss, ‚Foucault and Left Conservatism,‛ keywords: black; butler; critique; effect; ethics; fanon; foucault; humanism; moment; new; studies; subaltern; white; work cache: fous-2637.pdf plain text: fous-2637.txt item: #42 of 129 id: fous-2638 author: Fuggle, Sophie title: Excavating Government: Giorgio Agamben’s Archaeological Dig date: 2009-09-07 words: 8270 flesch: 49 summary: Here Agamben draws upon the distinction made by Foucault in The Order of Things: 11 Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: Archaeology of the Human Sciences (London and New York, NY: Routledge, 1988), 29. Where Agamben is well-known for his critique of biopower in Homo Sacer, his recent work a more complex engagement with Foucault both in terms of his subject matter, governmentality and economy (oikonomia), and his critical methodology, most notably, his reaffirmation of the value of Foucault’s archaeological method. keywords: agamben; archaeology; form; foucault; god; government; notion; order; power; practices; signature; sovereign; terms cache: fous-2638.pdf plain text: fous-2638.txt item: #43 of 129 id: fous-2639 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2639.htm plain text: fous-2639.txt item: #44 of 129 id: fous-2640 author: Gudmand-Høyer, Marius; Hjorth, Thomas Lopdrup title: Michel Foucault, The Birth of Biopolitics: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1978-1979. Edited by Michel Senellart. Translated by Graham Burchell (New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2008), ISBN: 978-1403986542 date: 2009-09-07 words: 16626 flesch: 37 summary: Here it is also demonstrated how The Birth of Biopolitics should not be re- garded as a mere parenthesis in the history of liberalism, but as Foucault’s most com- prehensive analysis of modern biopolitics, situated within the framework of what he in 1978 designated ‚the history of governmentality‛14 and in 1979 ‚the general disposi- tive [dispositif] of governmentality.‛15 Having established a more comprehensive con- 10 Mark Kelly, ‚Afterliberalism,‛ Radical Philosophy 153 (2009): 46-49; Mike Gane, ‚Foucault on Governmentality and Liberalism,‛ Theory, Culture & Society 25: 7-8 (2008) : 353-363; Thomas F. Tierney, ‚Review Essay: Michel Foucault, Security, Territory, Population: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1977-78,” Foucault Studies 5 (2008): 90-100; Diogo Sardinha, ‚Le découverte de la liberté,‛ Labyrinthe: La Biopolitique (d’)après Michel Foucault, 22:3 (2005): 89-99; Jeanine Hortoneda, ‚Sécurité, territoire, population et Naissance de la biopolitique de Michel Foucault‛, Empan, 59:3 (2005): 61-70; and Michel Senellart, ‚Course Context‛, 369-401 *Michel Senellart, ‚Situation des cours‛, 379-411]. For that reason, the population is not merely a biological species, a group of legal subjects, or individual bodies of discipline; it also represents its own natural or intrinsic logic, constituted as it is by different probabilities, by uncertainties and temporalities, by dangers, risks, and contingent events, in the same ways as this population varies with the climate, the material sur- roundings, the intensity of commerce, the circulation of wealth, laws and traditions, etc.33 Hence, in 1978 Foucault conceptualizes the governmental target of the popula- tion as a new collective focus of biopolitics, representing a ‚political object‛ insofar the population is that on which and towards which the acts of government are directed, but also a ‚political subject‛ insofar as it is the population that is called upon to con- duct itself in a particular way.34 30 Informative studies on this triangulation include: Michael Dillon, ‚Governing Through Con- tingency: The Security of Biopolitical Governance,‛ Political Geography 26:1 (2007): 41-47; Charles Ruelle, ‚Population, milieu et normes: Note sur l’enracinement biologique de la biopolitique de Foucault,‛ Labyrinthe: La Biopolitique (d’)après Michel Foucault 22:3 (2005): 27- 34; Anault Skornicki, ‚Le ‘biopouvoir’: détournement des puissances vitales ou invention de la vie (L’économie politique, le pian et le peuple au XVIIIe siècle),‛ Labyrinthe: La Biopolitique (d’)après Michel Foucault, 22:3 (2005): 55-65; Ute Tellmann, ‚Foucault and the Invisible Economy,‛ Foucault Studies 6 (2009): 5-24; and Thomas F. Tierney, ‚Review Essay: Michel Foucault, Security, Territory, Population: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1977-78,” Foucault Studies 5 (2008): 90-100. keywords: biopolitics; biopolitique; birth; de la; economic; economy; foucault; foucault studies; freedom; government; human; ibid; lectures; liberalism; market; michel foucault; naissance; naissance de; neo; population; security; social; state; way cache: fous-2640.pdf plain text: fous-2640.txt item: #45 of 129 id: fous-2641 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2641.htm plain text: fous-2641.txt item: #46 of 129 id: fous-2642 author: Rocha, Samuel title: Michael A. Peters and Tina (A.C.) Besley (eds.), Why Foucault? New Directions in Educational Research (New York: Peter Lang Publishing, 2007), ISBN: 978-0820478906 date: 2009-09-07 words: 1867 flesch: 42 summary: Wong argues that ‚Foucault takes from Kant’s essay the idea that the hallmark of enlightenment is the attitude of challenging assumptions about what we know and how we act.‛ (72) To Foucault scholars from other fields, it will direct their attention to educational studies. keywords: educational; foucault; question cache: fous-2642.pdf plain text: fous-2642.txt item: #47 of 129 id: fous-2643 author: kurz, joshua j. title: Tina (A.C.) Besley and Michael A. Peters, Subjectivity and Truth: Foucault, Education, and the Culture of Self (New York: Peter Lang Publishing, 2007), ISBN: 978-0820481951 date: 2009-09-07 words: 2476 flesch: 45 summary: 6 Besley & Peters, ST, 3. 7 Ibid., 4. 8 As do, for example, Hubert L. Dreyfus and Paul Rabinow, Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1983); Eric Paras, Foucault 2.0: Beyond Power and Knowledge (New York: Other Press, 2006). Therefore, it is unsurprising that they would author the ‚first systematic exploration of the relevance of Foucault’s explorations of subjectivity and truth, and its significance for educational theory of what Foucault referred to on a number of occasions as ‘the culture of self,’ especially in a course of lectures he gave in Berkeley in the early 1980s.‛2 Much of the book is drawn from conference presentations and course offerings by the authors, with significant revisions in order to make them cohere as a whole.3 Besley and Peters mobilize Foucault’s later work, especially his lectures, to frankly discuss the neoliberal shift in society and its implications for education. keywords: besley; education; foucault; new; peters; self cache: fous-2643.pdf plain text: fous-2643.txt item: #48 of 129 id: fous-2645 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2645.htm plain text: fous-2645.txt item: #49 of 129 id: fous-2646 author: Prinz, Sophia title: Dietmar Kammerer, Bilder der Überwachung (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp Verlag, 2008), ISBN: 978-3518125502 date: 2009-09-07 words: 2608 flesch: 42 summary: While the first deals with “surveillance images,” i.e., the development and implementation of CCTV and monitoring devices, the second part takes issue with “images of surveillance,” i.e. how surveillance is represented within the mass media. Usually, these maneuvers try to destruct the machinery of observation from the inside by confronting it with acts of counter-surveillance or by sabotaging the cameras, misusing surveillance images, and hacking the digital networks of the monitoring system. keywords: cctv; ibid; images; kammerer; society; surveillance cache: fous-2646.pdf plain text: fous-2646.txt item: #50 of 129 id: fous-2647 author: Donato, Antonio title: Pierre Hadot, The Present Alone is Our Happiness: Conversations with Jeannie Carlier and Arnold I. Davidson. Translated by Marc Djaballah (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2009), ISBN: 978-0804748353 date: 2009-09-07 words: 3199 flesch: 43 summary: In remembering his high school years, Hadot mentions a telling event, his 1939 high school examination in philosophy, which consisted of commenting on a famous quotation by Bergson, viz., “Philosophy is not the construction of a system, but the resolution made once to look naively at the world in and around oneself.” The book offers an excellent introduction to the basic tenets of Hadot’s revolutionary interpretation of ancient philosophy and arouses in the reader the curiosity to read his more scholarly works. keywords: hadot; life; philosophy; way; world cache: fous-2647.pdf plain text: fous-2647.txt item: #51 of 129 id: fous-2648 author: Schäfer, Hilmar title: Susanne Krasmann and Michael Volkmer (eds.), Michel Foucaults “Geschichte der Gouvernementalität” in den Sozialwissenschaften. Internationale Beiträge (Bielefeld: transcript, 2007), ISBN: 978-3899424881 Patricia Purtschert, Katrin Meyer and Yves Winter (eds.), Gouvernementalität und Sicherheit: Zeitdiagnostische Beiträge im Anschluss an Foucault (Bielefeld: transcript, 2008), ISBN: 978-3899426311 date: 2009-09-07 words: 3653 flesch: 31 summary: That concept- tualization is central to Foucault’s genealogy of modern forms of government and provides a specific link to his late work as it would have been basic to the fourth, Schäfer: review of Michel Foucault’s ”Geschichte de Gouvernementalität” in den socialwissenshaften & Both volumes assemble contributions from the social sciences with a strong focus on political theory and contend that the state has a more important role in governmentality studies for Foucault than has been acknowledged up to now. keywords: foucault; governmentality; lectures; michel; power; security; state; studies cache: fous-2648.pdf plain text: fous-2648.txt item: #52 of 129 id: fous-2649 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2649.htm plain text: fous-2649.txt item: #53 of 129 id: fous-2650 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2650.htm plain text: fous-2650.txt item: #54 of 129 id: fous-2652 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2652.htm plain text: fous-2652.txt item: #55 of 129 id: fous-2653 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2653.htm plain text: fous-2653.txt item: #56 of 129 id: fous-2654 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2654.htm plain text: fous-2654.txt item: #57 of 129 id: fous-2908 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-2908.htm plain text: fous-2908.txt item: #58 of 129 id: fous-561 author: Elden, Stuart; O’Farrell, Clare; Rosenberg, Alan title: Introducing Foucault Studies date: 2004-12-01 words: 1473 flesch: 46 summary: Although  there  are  a  select  number  of  journals  which  publish  various  kinds  of  research  influenced  by  Foucaultʹs  work (as well as other French thinkers), Foucault has not been accorded the  honour of a  journal which provides a forum for the discussion of his work,  including criticisms, developments and applications, the publication of new  translations  and  reviews  and  reports  of  books,  conferences  and  other  activities.  In particular, the journal aims to publish work which utilises  not only the more familiar material by Foucault but also the wide range of  material made available by the 1994 publication in French of a four volume  collection of over 360 of Foucaultʹs shorter writings and the more recent (and  ongoing)  publication  of  his  lectures.  keywords: foucault; journal; work cache: fous-561.pdf plain text: fous-561.txt item: #59 of 129 id: fous-562 author: Foucault, Michel title: The Crisis of Medicine or the Crisis of Antimedicine? date: 2004-12-01 words: 7730 flesch: 53 summary: Eighteenth century medicine freed itself from the scientific and therapeutic stagnation in which it had been mired beginning in the medieval period. This was the first of three lectures given by Michel Foucault on social medicine in October 1974 at the Institute of Social Medicine, Biomedical Center, of the State University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. keywords: body; century; consumption; crisis; economic; foucault; health; individual; medical; medicine; state cache: fous-562.pdf plain text: fous-562.txt item: #60 of 129 id: fous-563 author: Levy, Neil title: Foucault as Virtue Ethicist date: 2004-12-01 words: 5724 flesch: 50 summary: Foucault as Virtue Ethicist foucault studies © Neil Levy, 2004 ISSN: pending Foucault Studies, No 1, pp. I should not like my argument to be understood to play down the very  real differences in the stakes, styles and methods of the two major kinds of Western  20 Levy: Foucault as Virtue Ethicist   Foucault and the Virtues   Virtue ethicists are united by one core thesis: that modern moral theories have  placed far too much stress on, variously, rules, duties and consequences, and  accordingly have overlooked the true primary locus of ethics: the character of  the agent. keywords: care; ethics; foucault; morality; self; thought; virtue cache: fous-563.pdf plain text: fous-563.txt item: #61 of 129 id: fous-564 author: Moss, Jeremy title: Foucault and Left Conservatism date: 2004-12-01 words: 10354 flesch: 49 summary: I  end  by  discussing  the  political  possibilities  of  Foucault’s  work  in  terms  of  an  account of autonomy derived from Foucault’s later work on the Enlightenment.    As an antidote to the limitations of the approach of Butler and others, my key  claim will be  that Foucault’s work offers us a version of autonomy  that  is  consistent with some of his other insights concerning power and subjectivity,  that it can also function as a political principle that is not always confined to  local applications and that has a positive component, thereby offering a better  response to the problems facing contemporary left thought.     keywords: autonomy; butler; ethics; foucault; people; politics; position; power; theory; way; work cache: fous-564.pdf plain text: fous-564.txt item: #62 of 129 id: fous-565 author: Enoch, Simon title: The Contagion of Difference: Identity, Bio-politics and National Socialism date: 2004-12-01 words: 8034 flesch: 36 summary: The power/knowledge dynamic was thereby much  more  salient  in  this  type  of  environment  where  medical  knowledge  was  69   Lifton, 1986, 13.  70   Michel Foucault, “Politics and  the Study of Discourse.”  In order to more fully comprehend  the implications of this, it is necessary to explicate Foucault’s notion of bio‐ politics  as  the  production  of  a  normalizing  society  and  the  contributions  German medical discourse made to its realization through the construction of  the Jew as a biologized “Other.”   keywords: bio‐politics; discourse; disease; foucault; german; health; jew; jews; life; medicine; nazi; race; racial cache: fous-565.pdf plain text: fous-565.txt item: #63 of 129 id: fous-566 author: Lynch, Richard A. title: Two Bibliographical Resources for Foucault’s Work in English date: 2004-12-01 words: 2579 flesch: 53 summary: Michael  Clark published an annotated bibliography in 1983, but it only claimed to be  complete  through  1981  (in  fact,  it  is  not).2  In  the  early  1990s,  both  David  Macey  and  James  Bernauer  independently  compiled  bibliographies  of  Foucault’s works.3 These are both impressive accomplishments, but there are  a  number  of  discrepancies  between  their  lists,  and  neither  tries  to  exhaustively inventory all available translations.  David Macey’s 1993 ‘Bibliography: the works of Michel Foucault,’ like  Bernauer’s,  is  listed  in  chronological  order  of  composition  rather  than  publication.  keywords: bibliography; english; foucault; michel cache: fous-566.pdf plain text: fous-566.txt item: #64 of 129 id: fous-567 author: Stone, Brad Elliott title: Foucault, Michel. Abnormal: Lectures at the College de France,1974-1975, New York:Picador, 2003; "Society Must Be Defended:"Lectures at the College de France, 1975-1976. New York: Picador, 2003 date: 2004-12-01 words: 6542 flesch: 55 summary: In  these  lectures  Foucault  lays out  the archaeological elements  that account  for  the Modern  dispositif of power, bio‐power.  We must, along with  Foucault  (for  what  is  the  point  of  archaeology  without  critique?),  ask  the  reverse: Faut‐il défendre la société contre les anormaux? Answering this question  negatively opens up a new possibility of subjectivity, truth, and power.    II: keywords: abnormal; discourse; foucault; history; new; power; race; society; sovereign cache: fous-567.pdf plain text: fous-567.txt item: #65 of 129 id: fous-568 author: Kelly, Mark title: Han, Béatrice. Foucault's Critical Project: Between the Transcendental and the Historical. California: Stanford University Press, 2003 date: 2004-12-01 words: 2782 flesch: 51 summary: However, Béatrice Han takes up this relatively obscure perspective on  Foucault’s  thought2—and  runs  a  long  way  with  it.  Han  has  a  powerful  additional  piece  of  evidence  for  her  treatment  of  Foucault  in  relation  to  transcendental  idealism:  it  is  Foucault’s  own  doctoral  dissertation,  a  translation of and a commentary on Kant’s Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point  of View. keywords: book; foucault; han; project cache: fous-568.pdf plain text: fous-568.txt item: #66 of 129 id: fous-569 author: Thompson, Douglas I. title: McKinlay, Alan and Ken Starkey, eds. Foucault, Management and Organization Theory. London: Sage Publications, 2004 date: 2004-12-01 words: 2708 flesch: 34 summary: If there is a single, discernible Foucauldian theme running through all of the essays in Foucault, Management and Organization Theory, it is the development of techniques of observation, measure, and performance 1 Alan McKinlay and Ken Starkey, “Managing Foucault,” Introduction to Foucault, Management and Organization Theory: From Panopticon to Technologies of Self (hereafter referred to in the footnotes as FMOT), p. 1. 2 ibid., p. 3. Foucault, Management and Organization Theory: From Panopticon to Technologies of Self (London: Sage Publications, 1997). keywords: book; essays; foucault; management; organization; theory cache: fous-569.pdf plain text: fous-569.txt item: #67 of 129 id: fous-570 author: McSweeney, John title: Schuld, Joyce J. Foucault and Augustine: Reconsidering Power and Love. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2003 date: 2004-12-01 words: 2697 flesch: 31 summary: foucault studies foucault studies © John McSweeney, 2004 ISSN: pending Foucault Studies, No 1, pp. 105-110, December 2004 REVIEW  J. Joyce Schuld, Foucault and Augustine: Reconsidering Power and Love (Notre Dame, Indiana: Notre Dame University Press, 2003). Attention to this performative level enables Schuld to pursue this  unexpected conversation through a series of related issues in “theologically  oriented  cultural  analysis”,  from  social  evil  to  the  ambiguity  of  privileged  discourses, while allowing Foucault’s and Augustine’s respective social and  (inter)personal  emphases  to  extend,  in  a  kind  of  cross‐contamination,  “the  geographic  reach”  of  each  other’s  analyses.1  What  emerges  is  a  brilliantly  articulated  common  concern  with  the  complexities  and  ambiguities  of  the  social and political spheres, and a common commitment to attending to the  dangers  and  vulnerabilities  associated  with  them.  keywords: augustine; foucault; ibid; power; schuld cache: fous-570.pdf plain text: fous-570.txt item: #68 of 129 id: fous-571 author: Naseem, Muhammad Ayaz title: Foucault, Michel. Religion and Culture. J. R. Carrette (ed.). Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1999 date: 2004-12-01 words: 1128 flesch: 44 summary: foucault studies foucault studies © Muhammad Ayaz Naseem, 2004 ISSN: pending Foucault Studies, No 1, pp. 111-113, November 2004 REVIEW  Michel Foucault, Religion and Culture, Selected and Edited by Jeremy R. Carrette (New York: Routledge, 1999).    The complicated question of religion as it pertains to Foucault’s work is often  raised  by  scholars  and  students  of  Foucault.  keywords: foucault; religion cache: fous-571.pdf plain text: fous-571.txt item: #69 of 129 id: fous-572 author: Elden, Stuart title: Bernauer, James and Jeremy Carrette, eds. Foucault and Theology. Hampshire/Burlington: Ashgate, 2004 date: 2004-12-01 words: 869 flesch: 48 summary: Michel Foucault and Theology: Michel Foucault and Theology, which brings together a number of papers from a wide range of perspectives. keywords: foucault; michel; work cache: fous-572.pdf plain text: fous-572.txt item: #70 of 129 id: fous-573 author: D’Arcy, Stephen title: Foucault, Michel. The Essential Foucault: Selections from Essential Works of Foucault, 1954-1984. Ed. Paul Rabinow and Nikolas Rose. New York: The New Press, 2003 date: 2004-12-01 words: 1384 flesch: 35 summary: The Essential Foucault: Selections from Essential Works of Foucault, 1954- 1984 (New York: New Press, 2003). ISBN 1-56584-801-2 It  is  customary  to  periodize  Foucault’s  work  in  terms  of  three  phases,  the  archaeological writings of the 1960s, the genealogical writings of the 1970s,  and the ethical writings of the 1980s. keywords: foucault; new; power cache: fous-573.pdf plain text: fous-573.txt item: #71 of 129 id: fous-574 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-574.htm plain text: fous-574.txt item: #72 of 129 id: fous-575 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-575.htm plain text: fous-575.txt item: #73 of 129 id: fous-576 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-576.htm plain text: fous-576.txt item: #74 of 129 id: fous-6798 author: Stettler, Matteo Johannes title: The Use and Misuse of Pleasure: Hadot contra Foucault on the Stoic Dichotomy Gaudium-Voluptas in Seneca date: 2022-12-29 words: 13129 flesch: 56 summary: Pierre Hadot e Michel Foucault a confronto, Pensiero: rivista di filosofia 46:1/2 (2008). Pierre Hadot e Michel Foucault a con- fronto, Pensiero: rivista di filosofia 46:1/2 (2008), 95-111. keywords: ethics; foucault; foucault studies; gaudium; hadot; joy; life; michel foucault; philosophy; pierre hadot; pleasure; pleasure foucault; self; seneca; term; vita; voluptas; way cache: fous-6798.pdf plain text: fous-6798.txt item: #75 of 129 id: fous-6799 author: Westerink, Herman title: The Subject of Desire and the Hermeneutics of Thoughts: Foucault’s Reading of Augustine and Cassian in Confessions of the Flesh date: 2022-12-29 words: 13395 flesch: 52 summary: According to Foucault, the conviction of so many people who claim, with passionate resentment against their past, present and themselves, that their sexual desires are repressed13 has a scientific counterpart not only in the already men- tioned Freudo-Marxist cultural studies of, for example, Marcuse but also in the dominant 10 Michel Foucault, Security, Territory, Population. See also, Didier Eribon, Michel Foucault (1991), 270-272; Arnold Davidson, The Emer- gence of Sexuality (2001), 209-215; Amy Allen, “Foucault, Psychoanalysis and Critique,” Angelaki. keywords: augustine; cassian; confessions; desire; flesh; foucault; foucault studies; hermeneutics; law; libido; michel foucault; pastoral; practices; self; sexuality; subject; thoughts cache: fous-6799.pdf plain text: fous-6799.txt item: #76 of 129 id: fous-6802 author: Friedrich, Jasper title: Philosophy From the texture of Everyday Life: The Critical-Analytic Methods of Foucault and J. L. Austin date: 2022-12-29 words: 8892 flesch: 47 summary: Keywords: Michel Foucault, J. L. Austin, philosophical methodology, analytic philosophy, gene- alogy, ordinary language philosophy JASPER FRIEDRICH Foucault Studies, No. 33, 48-66. While there have been some scattered analyses of the similarities between analytic philosophers of language and Foucault’s own philosophy of language,6 there has, to my knowledge, been no serious treatment of intriguing suggestion that he took analytic philosophy of language as a model for his political philosophy, i.e., 1 Carlos G. Prado, Starting with Foucault: An Introduction to Genealogy (2018), 5-8. keywords: analysis; analytic; approach; austin; foucault; language; michel; philosophers; philosophy; politics; power; theory cache: fous-6802.pdf plain text: fous-6802.txt item: #77 of 129 id: fous-6804 author: Olssen, Mark title: Foucault’s New Materialism: An Extended Review Essay of Thomas Lemke’s The Government of Things date: 2022-12-29 words: 11607 flesch: 50 summary: INTRODUCTION I first wrote on Foucault as a complexity materialist in the 1990s with the publication of the article, ‘Michael Foucault’s Historical Materialism: an account and assessment’ in 1996, and later with my book Michel Foucault: Materialism and Education, initially published by Bergin & Garvey, New York, in 1999, and as an updated version by Paradigm Publish- ers in 2006. Olssen, Mark, “Foucault and Marx: Re-writing the history of historical materialism,” Policy Futures in Education, 2:3 (2005), 453-480. https://doi.org/10.2304/pfie.2004.2.3.3 Olssen, Mark, “Structuralism, Post-Structuralism, Neo-Liberalism: Assessing Foucault’s Leg- acy,” Journal of Education Policy, 18:2 (2003), 189-202. https://doi.org/10.1080/0268093022000043047 Olssen, Mark, Michel Foucault: Materialism and Education. keywords: approach; barad; complexity; concept; dispositive; foucault; foucault studies; government; ibid; lemke; mark; materialism; matter; milieu; new; olssen; things; world cache: fous-6804.pdf plain text: fous-6804.txt item: #78 of 129 id: fous-6806 author: Stettler, Matteo title: Marta Faustino and Gianfranco Ferraro (eds.), The Late Foucault: Ethical and Political Questions. London and New York: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2020. Pp. 304. date: 2022-12-29 words: 2621 flesch: 47 summary: The section titled ‘Government of Self, Government of Others’ moves to discussing the more properly po- litical ramifications of Foucault’s final thinking on the notions of power, government and governmentality (‘Understanding Power Through Governmentality’ by Karim Barakat), especially by bringing it in dialogue with other prominent, contemporary political theo- rists, such as Hannah Arendt (‘On Authority: A Discussion Between Michel Foucault and Hannah Arendt’ by Edgar Straehle) and Ernesto Laclau (‘Neoliberal Subjectivity at the Political Frontier’ by Matko Krce-Ivančić). Foucault, Michel, “The Concern for Truth,” in Michel Foucault: Politics, Philosophy, Culture. keywords: care; foucault; michel; self; truth; volume cache: fous-6806.pdf plain text: fous-6806.txt item: #79 of 129 id: fous-6807 author: Raffnsøe et al., Sverre title: Editorial date: 2022-12-29 words: 1769 flesch: 39 summary: When publishing in Foucault Studies authors retain copyright to their work. The editorial team is pleased to publish this issue of Foucault Studies containing three original articles as well as one extended review essay and one book review. keywords: analytic; article; foucault; philosophy; studies cache: fous-6807.pdf plain text: fous-6807.txt item: #80 of 129 id: fous-855 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-855.htm plain text: fous-855.txt item: #81 of 129 id: fous-856 author: Ojakangas, Mika title: Impossible Dialogue on Bio-power: Agamben and Foucault date: 2005-05-01 words: 11620 flesch: 51 summary: (3) Bio‐politics is not absolutized in the Third Reich; the  only thing that the Third Reich absolutizes is the sovereignty of power (Aryan race) and the  nakedness of life (the Jews).  For Foucault, bio‐ power is an essentially modern form of power and its purpose is to exert a  positive  influence on  life,  to optimise and multiply  life, by subjecting  it  to  precise  controls  and  comprehensive  regulations.  keywords: agamben; bio‐power; exception; form; foucault; homo; law; life; power; sacer; sovereign; state cache: fous-856.pdf plain text: fous-856.txt item: #82 of 129 id: fous-857 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-857.htm plain text: fous-857.txt item: #83 of 129 id: fous-858 author: Dillon, Michael title: Response date: 2005-05-01 words: 4521 flesch: 45 summary: It is changing as biopolitical investment analysts (politicians, risk analysts, governmental technologisers) also interrogate where the best returns on life investment happen to be located in the manifold circulation and transformation of life locally and globally. The nomological concerns the law, the biological concerns ‘life’ and the theological concerns the relation of life to transcendence in the form of divinity. keywords: agamben; biopolitics; death; foucault; life; ojakangas; press; university cache: fous-858.pdf plain text: fous-858.txt item: #84 of 129 id: fous-859 author: Ojakangas, Mika title: Author Response date: 2005-05-01 words: 3224 flesch: 59 summary: The justice of law is always distributive.  This telos is  not, however, merely an alternative to the one offered by the law; its intention  is to replace the justice of law. keywords: agamben; bio‐power; justice; law; power cache: fous-859.pdf plain text: fous-859.txt item: #85 of 129 id: fous-860 author: Miller, Paul Allen title: The Art of Self-Fashioning, or Foucault on Plato and Derrida date: 2005-05-01 words: 10731 flesch: 47 summary: 54-74, May 2005 ARTICLE  The Art of Self-Fashioning, or Foucault on Plato and Derrida Paul Allen Miller, University of South Carolina     ABSTRACT: This paper examines Foucault’s reading of Plato and ancient philosophy as part  of his continuing dialogue and debate with Derrida.  It  was  this  alternative  model  on  which  Foucault  concentrated during the final years of his life.6   In this paper, I shall examine Foucault’s reading of Plato and ancient  philosophy as part of his continuing dialogue and debate with Derrida on the  importance  and  interpretation  of  Plato  in  contemporary  philosophy.  keywords: cambridge; derrida; foucault; logos; paris; phaedrus; philosophy; plato; practice; press; reading; self; university; writing cache: fous-860.pdf plain text: fous-860.txt item: #86 of 129 id: fous-861 author: Harrer, Sebastian title: The Theme of Subjectivity in Foucault's Lecture Series 'Herméneutique du Sujet' date: 2005-05-01 words: 11434 flesch: 55 summary: Thomas Flynn, who holds that the philosophy of the late Foucault “fills in a gap in ‘structuralist’ historiography, namely, the absence of the individual, responsible agent”, p. 538 of his “Truth and Subjectivation in the later Foucault,” Journal of Philosophy 82 (1985): 531-540; furthermore: Tina Besley, “Social Education and Mental Hygiene: Foucault, disciplinary technologies and the moral constitution of youth,” Educational Philosophy and Theory 34, 4 (2002): 419-433; James D. Faubion, “Toward an Anthropology of Ethics: Foucault and the Pedagogies of Autopoiesis,” Edith Wyschogrod (ed.), The Ethical (Oxford: Blackwell, 2003): 146-165; also: Rob Devos, “The Return of the Subject in Michel Foucault,” American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 76, 2 (2002): 255-280: “In processes of self-constitution the subject is not only target and effect. 4.6; Thomas McCarthy, “The Critique of Impure Reason: Foucault and the Frankfurt School,” ibid., Ideals and Illusions: On Deconstruction and Reconstruction in Contemporary Critical Theory (Cambridge (MA): MIT Press, 1991); Michael Walzer, “The Politics of Michel Foucault,” David Hoy (ed.), Foucault: A Critical Reader (Oxford: Blackwell, 1986); Charles Taylor, “Foucault on Freedom and Truth,” Foucault: A Critical Reader. keywords: constitution; discipline; foucault; idea; life; l’herméneutique; philosophy; power; practices; self; spiritual; subject; sujet; term; works cache: fous-861.pdf plain text: fous-861.txt item: #87 of 129 id: fous-862 author: Sharpe, Matthew title: 'Critique' as Technology of the Self date: 2005-05-01 words: 9315 flesch: 46 summary: Rousseau taught Kant that metaphysics undermined rather than supported morality, alienating humans from a recognition of their own moral autonomy by hypostasising its products- the laws of human morality- as the expression of the will or 'natural law' of God.28 In both Beiser’s and Velkley’s accounts, then, Kant’s critical philosophy- conceived as decisively post-Rousseauian29- is situated as a 21 Velkley, Freedom and the End of Reason, 5 22 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, A805/B833. On the level of Kant scholarship, to read Kantian critique as an- albeit impersonal- ascetic practice, is to reinstall the ‘primacy of practical reason’ at the heart of our understanding of Kant. keywords: critique; enlightenment; ethics; foucault; kant; philosophy; question; reason; self; subjectivity; technology; truth; work cache: fous-862.pdf plain text: fous-862.txt item: #88 of 129 id: fous-863 author: McSweeney, John title: Foucault and Theology date: 2005-05-01 words: 13220 flesch: 38 summary: foucault studies foucault studies © John McSweeney, 2005 ISSN: 1832-5203 Foucault Studies, No 2, pp.117-144, May 2005 STATE OF THE DISCIPLINES Foucault and Theology John McSweeney Theological Appropriations of Foucault From its emergence in the mid-1980s, theological engagement with the thought of Michel Foucault – taking place within the Christian tradition – has followed three principal trajectories, reflecting developments in Foucault scholarship as well as wider critical debates, and variously negotiating the relationship that might be established between Foucault’s thought and theology. In addition to the work of Bryan Turner cited in note 1, the influence of Foucault upon the study of religion is to be found in David Chidester, “Michel Foucault and the Study of Religion”, Religious Studies Review 12:1 (1986), 1-9; Catherine Bell, Ritual Theory, Ritual Practice (New York: Oxford, 1992); Talal Asad, Genealogies of Religion (Baltimore: Maryland: John Hopkins University Press, 1993). keywords: bernauer; carrette; christian; engagement; foucault; foucault studies; god; michel foucault; new; parrhesia; philosophy; power; press; relation; religion; religious; spirituality; theology; thought; work cache: fous-863.pdf plain text: fous-863.txt item: #89 of 129 id: fous-864 author: Nale, John Elias title: Foucault, Michel. La Peinture de Manet suivi de Michel Foucault un regard. Sous la direction de Maryvonne Saison. Paris: Seuil, 2004 date: 2005-05-01 words: 2056 flesch: 48 summary: Foucault sketches the three fundamental components of this tradition: 1) attempting to mask or hide the rectangular dimensions of the canvas through the use of oblique or spiraling lineage; 2) attempting to deny the real light of day by illuminating the spectacle with an internal lateral lighting; 3) the placing of the spectator at a certain site in front 1 Michel Foucault, La Peinture de Manet (Paris: In speaking of Manet’s Olympia, Foucault says, “A lighting that comes from the front, a lighting that comes from the space that is found in front of the canvas, that’s to say the lighting, the illuminating source that is indicated, that is supposed by this lighting of the woman, this illuminating source, where is it if not precisely where we 2 Foucault, La Peinture de Manet, 24. keywords: foucault; manet cache: fous-864.pdf plain text: fous-864.txt item: #90 of 129 id: fous-865 author: Zapata, Fernando R. title: Foucault, Michel. Fearless Speech Cambridge, MA: Semiotext(e), 2001 date: 2005-05-01 words: 1722 flesch: 50 summary: 11 Foucault, Fearless Speech, 170-171. 12 Michel Foucault, Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason, (New York: Vintage Books, 1988). ISBN 1584350113 Both new and practiced readers of Michel Foucault are subject to the habitual cataloguing of his works in terms of trajectories, and might intuit Fearless Speech as a homogenously ethical piece because of the trajectory of thought credited to Foucault in the 1980s. keywords: foucault; parrhesia; speech; truth cache: fous-865.pdf plain text: fous-865.txt item: #91 of 129 id: fous-866 author: Fall, Juliet J. title: Cusset, François. French Theory: Foucault, Derrida, Deleuze & Cie et les mutations de la vie intellectuelle aux Etats-Unis. Paris: La Découverte, 2003 date: 2005-05-01 words: 1850 flesch: 44 summary: It is throughout a tale of recuperation and intellectual reterritorialisation: Americans and British from the end of the Sixties to the Nineties being caught up in the mystical invocation of French names; ‘new’ French philosophers in the late Seventies trying to gain notoriety by swiftly condemning contemporary philosophers en bloc and seeking to take their place in the public eye; the global success, notoriety and spread of French Theory into new fields – subaltern studies, cultural studies, feminist critiques; and finally the tale of Cusset himself, writing this useful book about big names, no longer one of the few lonely Queer Theorists in France, but instead cast as an efficient transatlantic mediator. ISSN: 1832-5203 Foucault Studies, No 2, pp. 154-158, May 2005 REVIEW François Cusset, French Theory: Foucault, Derrida, Deleuze & Cie et les mutations de la vie intellectuelle aux États-Unis (Paris: La Découverte, 2003) ISBN: keywords: american; cusset; foucault; tale; theory cache: fous-866.pdf plain text: fous-866.txt item: #92 of 129 id: fous-867 author: Mellamphy, Nandita Biswas title: Davidson, Arnold. The Emergence of Sexuality: Historical Epistemology and the Formation of Concepts. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001 date: 2005-05-01 words: 2356 flesch: 26 summary: In attempting to stage a productive confrontation between Michel Foucault’s methodology of conceptual analysis and Anglo-American analytic philosophy, Davidson makes a valuable contribution to the epistemological debate about the history of knowledge, one that will prove to be of interest to epistemologists and historians, as well as to those generally engaged with Foucault’s work. Given the importance of a functional understanding of statements then, it is surprising that Davidson does not draw the obvious and clear connection between his employment of Ian Hacking’s concept of dynamic nominalism,10 Heinrich Wölfflin’s notion of ‘history without names,’11 Pierre Hadot’s Wittgensteinian idea that language does not always function “in only one way and always for the same goal”12 and his own claim to have read 6 Michel Foucault, Ethics, Subjectivity and Truth: keywords: davidson; emergence; foucault; sexuality cache: fous-867.pdf plain text: fous-867.txt item: #93 of 129 id: fous-868 author: Brich, Cecile title: Artières, P., Laurent Q., Michelle Z., eds. Le Groupe d'information sur les prisons: Archives d'une lutte, 1970-1972. Paris: 2004. Kagan, E. & Jaubert A.. Michel Foucault, une journée particulière. Lyon: 2004. date: 2005-05-01 words: 1526 flesch: 48 summary: ISBN: 2915033056 These two recent French publications document the work of the Group for Information on Prisons (GIP), which Foucault co-founded and, with his partner Daniel Defert, was most heavily involved in running. The work of the GIP has thus far mostly been discussed in hagiographical mode, most extensively in Foucault’s biographies, and in a handful of articles and unpublished French dissertations. keywords: foucault; gip; prisoners; work cache: fous-868.pdf plain text: fous-868.txt item: #94 of 129 id: fous-869 author: Javors, Irene title: Taylor, Dianna and Karen Vintges, eds. Feminism and The Final Foucault, Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2004. date: 2005-05-01 words: 1410 flesch: 53 summary: Feminism and the Final Foucault offers the reader a wonderful opportunity to learn more about Foucault’s later work and how Foucault, eds. In “Experience and Truth Telling in a Post-Humanist World,”5 Mariana Velverde discusses Foucault’s ideas 2 Taylor and Vintges, Feminism and the Final Foucault, 6. 3 Taylor and Vintges, Feminism and the Final Foucault, 9. 4 Michel Foucault, Politics, Philosophy, Culture: Interviews and Other Writings, 1977-1984; trans. keywords: feminism; foucault; self; taylor cache: fous-869.pdf plain text: fous-869.txt item: #95 of 129 id: fous-870 author: Biebricher, Thomas title: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzsche: A Double Misunderstanding date: 2005-11-01 words: 12251 flesch: 37 summary: 16 Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzsche Habermas’s  respective  accounts  miss  in  both  cases,  with  the  first  miss  partially  causing  the  second  one.  foucault studies foucault studies © Thomas Biebricher, 2005 ISSN: 1832-5203 Foucault Studies, No 3, pp. 1-26, Nov 2005 ARTICLE  Habermas, Foucault and Nietzsche: keywords: approach; critique; discourse; foucault; genealogy; habermas; history; knowledge; michel; nietzsche; philosophical; philosophy; sciences; theory cache: fous-870.pdf plain text: fous-870.txt item: #96 of 129 id: fous-871 author: Mellamphy, Dan; Mellamphy, Nandita Biswas title: In 'Descent' Proposal: Pathologies of Embodiment in Nietzsche, Kafka, and Foucault date: 2005-11-01 words: 10688 flesch: 32 summary: ”14   Despite the fact that the concept of body in Nietzsche does not attain  the level of systematic conceptual clarity it later finds in Foucault’s thought,  and  that  Foucault’s  elaboration  of  genealogy  diverges  from  Nietzsche’s  in  several ways,15 it can still be argued, as we do in the present paper, that the  Foucaultian notion of ‘bodily inscription’ can be found in more rudimentary  form in the Nietzschean idea of ‘bodily descent’16 (which he first describes as  the experience of  ‘going under’ in Thus Spoke Zarathustra) articulated in the  preface to the Gay Science as the philosopher’s object and subject of study.  14   Miller, The Passion of Michel Foucault, 69.  15   For  a  discussion  of  the  similarities  and  differences  between  Nietzsche’s  and  Foucault’s  conception  of  body,  see  for  example  Dreyfus  and  Rabinow’s  seminal  study, Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics  (Brighton:  Harvester,  1982). keywords: apparatus; body; descent; foucault; freedom; genealogy; history; inscription; kafka; matrix; mellamphy; new; nietzsche; power cache: fous-871.pdf plain text: fous-871.txt item: #97 of 129 id: fous-872 author: Fillion, Réal title: Freedom, Truth, and Possibility in Foucault's Ethics date: 2005-11-01 words: 7934 flesch: 39 summary: Indeed,  might  not  Foucault’s preoccupation with specifically Greek ethics, at the end of his life,  have been motivated by a kind of personal curiosity6 (perhaps nourished by  3   Michel Foucault, “On the genealogy of ethics: an overview of work in progress”, in  Foucault, Ethics, 266, my emphasis.  Foucault is interested in it precisely  because of the way freedom is understood as “a certain form of relationship of  17   Terry  Pinkard,  German  Philosophy,  1760‐1860:  The  Legacy  of  Idealism,  (Cambridge:  Cambridge University Press, 2002), 59.  18   Foucault, of course, is hardly alone in this; for a good discussion of how Foucault’s  concern with ethics relates  to Lacan’s similar critique of Kant, cf.,  John Rajchman,  Truth and Eros: Foucault, Lacan, and the Question of Ethics. keywords: ethics; experience; foucault; freedom; hegel; kant; order; possibility; practices; truth cache: fous-872.pdf plain text: fous-872.txt item: #98 of 129 id: fous-873 author: May, Todd title: Foucault Now? date: 2005-11-01 words: 6222 flesch: 67 summary: As a result, they would  account  Foucault’s  histories  of  sexuality,  of  the  prison,  and  of  madness  as  belonging to another age, an epoch that precedes rather than coincides with  our own.    , Clemson University     It has been twenty‐one years since Foucault’s death. keywords: foucault; history; new; present; question; sexuality; time cache: fous-873.pdf plain text: fous-873.txt item: #99 of 129 id: fous-874 author: Hamann, Trent H. title: Foucault's Wake: A Response to Todd May's "Foucault Now?" date: 2005-11-01 words: 2497 flesch: 51 summary: ”4 My intention here is not to create a kind of  binary opposition between ways of reading Foucault, some right and some  wrong, nor  is  it  to suggest  that May has done so.  While the conference was organized as a  way to bring together and celebrate some of the diverse kinds of work, art,  and play that many people engage  in through their readings of Foucault, I  understood May’s title to be something of a cautionary gesture and reminder  consisting  of  two  interrelated  concerns  developed  throughout  the  address.  keywords: foucault; history; question; work cache: fous-874.pdf plain text: fous-874.txt item: #100 of 129 id: fous-875 author: McWhorter, Ladelle title: The Technology of Biopower: A Response to Todd May's "Foucault Now?" date: 2005-11-01 words: 2432 flesch: 49 summary: ISSN: 1832-5203 Foucault Studies, No 3, pp. 83-87, Nov 2005 ARTICLE  The Technology of Biopower A Response to Todd May’s “Foucault Now?”   Ladelle McWhorter, University of Richmond     Because the occasion for his essay was the inaugural conference of the newly  formed Foucault Society in New York City in the spring of 2005, Todd May  takes as his point of departure  the question of whether Foucault’s work  is  valuable to the sort of people who have come together to form that society:  philosophers, artists, political activists, and  in general to concerned citizens  today,  twenty  years  after  Michel  Foucault’s  death.  May has no intention of arguing that, on the contrary, Foucault’s works  are  timeless.  keywords: biopower; foucault; oil; work cache: fous-875.pdf plain text: fous-875.txt item: #101 of 129 id: fous-876 author: May, Todd title: Response to Hamann and McWhorter date: 2005-11-01 words: 1128 flesch: 59 summary: What  both  Professor  Hamann  and  Professor  McWhorter  suggest  is  that, since Foucault’s death, there have been important global changes in our  88 May: Response to Hamann and McWhorter world, changes that, while they require a genealogical approach in order fully  to  grasp,  nevertheless  have  altered  fundamentally  the  situation  we  find  ourselves  in, or at  least will soon do so.  88-90, Nov 2005 ARTICLE  Response to Hamann and McWhorter   Todd May, Clemson University     It is great good fortune to have generous readers. keywords: hamann; professor cache: fous-876.pdf plain text: fous-876.txt item: #102 of 129 id: fous-878 author: Keye, C. Neal title: Review - Department of History, Politics, and Culture, The College of St. Scholastica, USA date: 2005-11-01 words: 2463 flesch: 22 summary: 8  Hoy, Critical Resistance, 9.  9  Hoy, Critical Resistance, 59.  10  Hoy, Critical Resistance, 14.  94 Keye: Review of Critical Resistance In this connection, Hoy turns to Judith Butler’s provocative reading of  Foucault  in  The  Psychic  Life  of  Power,  in  which  she  senses  a  “suppressed  psychoanalysis”  in  Foucault’s  genealogical  account  of  subjection  and  resistance.11  By  pursuing  a  psychoanalytic  critique  of  Foucault,  and  at  the  same  time, a Foucaultian critique of psychoanalysis, Butler argues  that  the  subject who is produced in and through subjection is never fully constituted in  subjection.  And while this  resistance,  as  it  were,  to  theorizing  about  resistance  in  the  Anglophone  tradition possesses a historicity that Critical Resistance does not examine, Hoy  consistently  argues  that  the  challenge  facing  those  who  wish  to  defend  a  poststructuralist  politics  is  to  show  how  the  different  kinds  of  resistance  articulated in poststructuralism – from the body of resistance in Foucault to  the ethical resistance of the Other in Levinas – are not reactive evasions of the  political,  but  rather  critical  interventions  in  practice.  keywords: butler; foucault; hoy; power; resistance cache: fous-878.pdf plain text: fous-878.txt item: #103 of 129 id: fous-879 author: Eudaily, Seán Patrick title: Review - Department of History, Philosophy, and Social Sciences, University of Montana - Western, USA date: 2005-11-01 words: 1724 flesch: 43 summary: In the main body of Hoy’s book is to be found a wealth of informative  commentary and theoretical elaboration on the works of Nietzsche, Foucault,  1   David  Couzens  Hoy,  Critical  Resistance:  From  Poststructuralism  to  Post‐Critique  (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2005), 2.  2   Hoy, Critical Resistance, 5.  97 foucault studies, No 3, pp. While  Hoy  acknowledges  that  Bourdieu  is  not  a  poststructuralist,  and  is  “closer to Marx and Merleau‐Ponty” than Nietzsche, he finds the notions of  habitus  and  field  to  be  a  similar  approach  to  doing  an  embodied  social  ontology  to Foucault’s genealogies.6 The end of  the discussion of Bourdieu  marks  the  turning  point  in  the  book  towards  a  consideration  of  the  controversy surrounding poststructuralist forays into ethics and politics.   keywords: foucault; hoy; nietzsche; resistance cache: fous-879.pdf plain text: fous-879.txt item: #104 of 129 id: fous-880 author: Hoy, David Couzens title: Response - Reflections on Critical Resistance date: 2005-11-01 words: 2551 flesch: 55 summary: The texts that I work through  in  the  opening  chapter  on  Nietzsche,  followed  by  the  central  chapter  on  Foucault,  helped  to  form  my  understanding  of  what  is  important  in  philosophy.  Of course, philosophers such  as  Foucault,  Derrida,  Bourdieu,  and  Levinas  are  inconceivable  without  Heidegger’s  influence.  keywords: book; foucault; philosophy; resistance; theory cache: fous-880.pdf plain text: fous-880.txt item: #105 of 129 id: fous-881 author: Kelly, Mark G. E. title: Michel Foucault, The Hermeneutics of the Subject: Lectures at the Collège de France 1981-1982. Edited by Frédéric Gros. Translated by Graham Burchell. New York: Palgrave Macmillan date: 2005-11-01 words: 2658 flesch: 55 summary: Of  course, the concepts here are far from new in that they are mostly ancient, but  they  are  also  largely  concepts  which  can  be  found  in  Foucault’s  other  107 1   Frédéric Gros, “Course Context”, in Michel Foucault, The Hermeneutics of the Subject  (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004), 518.  2   Michel Foucault, The Hermeneutics of the Subject: Lectures at the Collège de France 1981‐ 1982 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005), 187‐192.  Now, in the work under discussion,  Foucault  is of course still animated by a desire  to write  the history of  the  present.  keywords: foucault; hermeneutics; self; subject cache: fous-881.pdf plain text: fous-881.txt item: #106 of 129 id: fous-882 author: Beaulieu, Alain title: Timothy O'Leary. Foucault and the Art of Ethics. London and New York: Continuum, 2002. date: 2005-11-01 words: 1727 flesch: 45 summary: Some Foucauldians consider that his genealogy of power remains,  perhaps  necessarily,  incomplete  and  they  denounce  Foucault’s  “technocratization  shift.”  Some  classical  scholars  blame  Foucault  for  his  misunderstandings of Hellenistic thinking, while other commentators criticize  Foucaultʹs artificial, individualistic and nihilistic “return to the subject,” and  some  political  thinkers  take  a  radical  stance  against  the  aestheticising  of  practical problems in Foucault’s later works.  OʹLeary  presents  Foucaultʹs  “art  of  existence”  (the  “aesthetics of existence” or the “etho‐poetics” as Foucault sometimes calls it)  1  Mitchell  Dean,  Governmentality:  Power  and  Rule  in  Modern  Society  (London:  Sage,  1999);  Thomas  Lemke,  Eine  Kritik  der  politischen  Vernunft.  keywords: art; ethics; foucault; work cache: fous-882.pdf plain text: fous-882.txt item: #107 of 129 id: fous-883 author: Dumitrica, Delia Despina title: David Macey. Michel Foucault. London: Reaktion Books, 2005 date: 2005-11-01 words: 1665 flesch: 45 summary: 117-120, Nov 2005 REVIEW  David Macey, Michel Foucault (London: Reaktion Books, 2005). This very brief book (only  160  pages,  half  letter‐page  size)  is  very  suitable  reading  for  those  curious  about the context in which Foucault’s work emerged, while the rich collection  of photographs  (twenty) puts a  face on one of  the most popular names  in  today’s  social  sciences.  keywords: foucault; life; macey; michel cache: fous-883.pdf plain text: fous-883.txt item: #108 of 129 id: fous-884 author: Golder, Ben title: Eduardo Mendieta and Jeffrey Paris. (eds.) 'Biopolitics and Racism', Special Issue of Radical Philosophy Review, Vol. 7, No. 1, (2004) date: 2005-11-01 words: 2648 flesch: 34 summary: What seems to have in  part precipitated the Anglophone resurgence of interest in Foucault’s work is  the translation into English of the series of lectures which he gave in 1976 at  the Collège de France.  As  both  the  subject  matter of Foucault’s lectures and the title of this volume imply, the common  Constitution  of  the  State:  Foucault’s “Il  faut défendre  la  société”  and  the  Politics  of  Calculation’, boundary 2 29:1 (2002): 125‐51; Pasquale Pasquino,  ‘Political Theory of  War and Peace: Foucault and the History of Modern Political Theory’, Economy and  Society 22:1 (1993): 76‐88.  keywords: foucault; lectures; society; state; work cache: fous-884.pdf plain text: fous-884.txt item: #109 of 129 id: fous-885 author: Hamann, Trent H. title: Dror Wahrman. The Making of the Modern Self: Identity and Culture in Eighteenth-Century England. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2004 date: 2005-11-01 words: 2365 flesch: 44 summary: 127-131, Nov 2005 REVIEW  Dror Wahrman, The Making of the Modern Self: Identity and Culture in Eighteenth-Century England. Wahrman  imagines a conversational link between the first and the third of the writers he  quotes  in order  to suggest a possible congruity between George Berkeley’s  “early  eighteenth‐century  diffidence”  and  Foucault’s  “post‐modern  contrariness” regarding personal identity. keywords: century; identity; self; time; wahrman cache: fous-885.pdf plain text: fous-885.txt item: #110 of 129 id: fous-886 author: Igrek, Apple Zefelius title: Gary Shapiro, Archaeologies of Vision: Foucault and Nietzsche on Seeing and Saying. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003 date: 2005-11-01 words: 2159 flesch: 46 summary: In the following review I will  touch upon  three  interrelated motifs  that are crucial  to  the ways  in which  Shapiro  responds  to  the  above  questions:  1)  vision  is  complex,  layered,  reversible,  shifting,  and  incomplete;  2)  vision  borders  near  an  infinite  recurrence  of  non‐meaning;  and  3)  the  affirmation  of  the  first  and  second  motifs  requires  that  we  overcome  ourselves  in  a  process  of  self‐ transformation.  But  this  certainly  is  not  the  only  way  of  thinking  about  infinity.11 The disappearance of the center, the absence of meaning, and the  death of  the subject are affirmed by Shapiro  in  the sense  that every act of  vision  is “framed  in a  larger context of which we may or may not become  aware. keywords: archaeologies; foucault; shapiro; vision cache: fous-886.pdf plain text: fous-886.txt item: #111 of 129 id: fous-887 author: Polito, Mary title: David Glimp, Increase and Multiply: Governing Cultural Reproduction in Early Modern England, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2003 date: 2005-11-01 words: 2910 flesch: 33 summary: ISSN: 1832-5203 Foucault Studies, No 3, pp. 137-143, Dec 2005 REVIEW  David Glimp, Increase and Multiply: Governing Cultural Reproduction in Early Modern England (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2003). Following Ian Hacking, Glimp also attends  1  See Michel Foucault, “Society Must Be Defended”: Lectures at the Collège de France 1975‐ 1976. keywords: english; foucault; glimp; increase; milton; multiply cache: fous-887.pdf plain text: fous-887.txt item: #112 of 129 id: fous-888 author: Weems, Lisa title: Sara Mills, Michel Foucault , London: Routledge, 2003 date: 2005-11-01 words: 2297 flesch: 40 summary: Here, Mills  brings  the  work  of  Edward  Said  and  Mary  Louise  Pratt  to  bear  on  the  discussion  of  how  European  knowledge  systems  did  not  “discover”  classificatory systems regarding everything  from botany  to  intellect; rather,  13   Michel  Foucault,  ‘Two  lectures’,  in  C.  Gordon  (ed.),  Power/Knowledge  (Brighton:  Harvester, 1980), 98.  14   Mills, Michel Foucault, 83.  15   Mills, Michel Foucault, 90.  16   Mills, Michel Foucault, 123.  148 Weems: Review of Michel Foucault according to Pratt, Foucault argues that European regimes of truth destroyed  existing indigenous ways of knowing.17     Especially  important  in  this  introduction  to  Foucault  is  the  author’s  keen understanding of Foucault’s myriad selves.  Also  significant  regarding  the  Routledge  series  is  that  the  editors  intend  all  volumes  to  present  an  “accessible  overview”  of  each  of  the  144 Weems: Review of Michel Foucault respective theorist’s scholarship.1 To that end, Mills does an excellent  job of  presenting Foucault’s ideas, as much as possible, without assuming that the  reader  has  an  extensive  knowledge  of  Critical  Theory,  philosophy  or  even  literary studies. keywords: foucault; michel; mills; power; work cache: fous-888.pdf plain text: fous-888.txt item: #113 of 129 id: fous-889 author: Zeyl, Jonathan title: Jeremy R. Carrette, Foucault and Religion: Spiritual Corporality and Political Spirituality, London and New York: Routledge Press, 2000 date: 2005-11-01 words: 1332 flesch: 35 summary: ”1  Drawing attention to Foucault’s own suggestion in 1963 that there “may be a  religious  question”  throughout  his  work  Carrette  argues  that  if  such  a  question exists it is one that radically alters the “traditional contours in the  philosophy of religion. ”4 With his framework established Carrette carries  on his argument that the ‘religious question’ in Foucault’s pre‐ 1976 work can  be viewed as recovering the body from “silences” (spiritual corporality) and  his post‐1976 writings can be understood in a broader context as redefining  the  “utterances”  of  religion  through  the  technology  of  the  self  (political  spirituality).     keywords: carrette; foucault; religion cache: fous-889.pdf plain text: fous-889.txt item: #114 of 129 id: fous-890 author: Elden, Stuart; O'Farrell, Clare; Rosenberg, Alan; Meyet, Sylvain title: An End, and a New Beginning... date: 2007-02-01 words: 610 flesch: 59 summary: foucault studies foucault studies © Stuart Elden, Clare O’Farrell, Alan Rosenberg, Sylvain Meyet, 2007 1-2, Feb 2007 EDITORIAL  An End, and a New Beginning… Stuart Elden, Clare O’Farrell, Alan Rosenberg, Sylvain Meyet With this issue, the original editorial team of Foucault Studies steps down, and  a new one takes over. keywords: journal cache: fous-890.pdf plain text: fous-890.txt item: #115 of 129 id: fous-891 author: Foucault, Michel title: Psychiatric Power - Lectures at the Collège de France, 1973-1974. Ed. Jacques Lagrange, trans. Graham Burchell, intro. Arnold I. Davidson, (London: Palgrave, Macmillan 2006). Extract from Chapter One, 7 November 1973. date: 2007-02-01 words: 1887 flesch: 48 summary: ”3 An order,  therefore, for which bodies are only surfaces to be penetrated and volumes to  be worked on, an order which is like a great nervure of prescriptions, such  that bodies are invaded and run through by order.  ”4 That  is to say, you can see that a certain degree of  order,  a  degree  discipline,  and  regularity,  reaching  inside  the  body,  are  necessary for two things.    keywords: asylum; des; order; power; relationship cache: fous-891.pdf plain text: fous-891.txt item: #116 of 129 id: fous-892 author: Séglard, Dominique title: Foucault à Tunis: Note sur deux conférences date: 2007-02-01 words: 4489 flesch: 54 summary: Conclusion générale :  1. Cette série d’événements a opéré une variation de l’un des cinq  traits de la structure universelle de la folie;  2. Contre le préjugé d’une évolution continue de la raison et de la  science qui finirait par connaître une maladie jusque‐là cachée.    Le  département  de  philosophie  est  dirigé  par  Gérard  Deledalle,  spécialiste  de  philosophie  anglo‐saxonne.  keywords: comme; dans; des; foucault; les; que; qui cache: fous-892.pdf plain text: fous-892.txt item: #117 of 129 id: fous-893 author: Ure, Michael V. title: Senecan Moods: Foucault and Nietzsche on the Art of the Self date: 2007-02-01 words: 16165 flesch: 28 summary: Gretchen Reydams‐Schils amplifies and clarifies this  quick  gloss  on  the  connection  the  Stoics  drew  between  the  care  of  the  self  and  relationality; see Gretchen Reydam‐Schils, The Roman Stoics: Self, Responsibility, and  Affection (Chicago: University of Chicago, 2006), Ch. 2.   63  Jim Urpeth makes a similar claim about the “fundamental, though  largely  implicit  contribution” Foucault’s history of the ancient care of the self makes to arriving at a  clear  understanding  of  Nietzsche’s  idea  of  askēsis.  He  demonstrates that Christianity wrongly interprets Hellenistic self‐cultivation  as  closely  connected,  either  historically  or  analytically,  with  a  “conceited  ontology” that gives license to various brands of hyper‐individualism.13  Foucault’s  interpretation  of  Hellenistic  self‐cultivation  sets  it  apart  from  individualism  understood  either  as  a  solipsistic  withdrawal  into  the  private sphere, a crude exaltation of singularity, or, as indeed Augustine saw  it,  an  inflamed  self‐love  that  blossoms  into  a  love  of  power  over  others.14  According to Foucault, an intense labour of the self on itself can, as it did with  the Stoics, fuse with fulfilling one’s obligations to humankind, to one’s fellow  citizens and to a denunciation of social withdrawal.15 Once it emerges from  the  shadows  of  Christianity,  he  argues,  the  Hellenistic  tradition  can  be  rightfully seen as a rich vein of philosophical therapy that takes as its starting  13   Romand Coles constructs pagan subjectivity as founded on a “conceited ontology”;  see Romand Coles, Self, Power, Others: Political Theory and Dialogical Ethics  (Ithaca:  Cornell University Press, 1992).  keywords: art; care; claims; conception; ethics; foucault; life; new; nietzsche; oneself; philosophy; practices; roman; self; soul; stoicism; stoics; terms; therapy; tradition; trans; way; work cache: fous-893.pdf plain text: fous-893.txt item: #118 of 129 id: fous-894 author: Prozorov, Sergei title: The unrequited love of power: biopolitical investment and the refusal of care date: 2007-02-01 words: 12103 flesch: 27 summary: If the transcendent aspect of sovereign power is contained in the  figure of the sovereign exterior to the immanence of the life of its subjects, a  sovereign  who  kills  but  does  not  care,  the  transcendent  moment  of  immanentist biopolitics may well be embodied by the figure of a living being  who does not care so much for being cared for by power, a being that rebels  against  being  ‘cared  to  death’  and  would  rather  die  (or  kill)  than  live  like  that.23  the ‘power over life’ that is ultimately life‐ negating in the Nietzschean sense.  a man might achieve ‘as a living being’, as a set of forces  at resist.25      As both Foucault and Agamben argue, one gains nothing by resisting  biopower on  the  terrain of sovereignty with  its conceptual armour of  laws  and rights.24 However, it is possible to resist biopower on its own terrain by  asserting the ‘power of life’ against    Life becomes resistance to power when power takes life as its object.  56 Prozorov: Biopolitical Investment exhausted  by  the  form  of  the  sovereign  decision,  whose  validity  does  not  depend on its substance, biopower operates with a norm without form of the  law, a command reduced to pure content that is derived from the substance of  synthetic life: “Power in biopolitical societies is not political power at all, but  purely administrative power – power of the experts and interpreters of life. keywords: biopolitical; biopower; care; foucault; hardt; human; investment; life; negri; politics; power; resistance; society; sovereignty; soviet; state cache: fous-894.pdf plain text: fous-894.txt item: #119 of 129 id: fous-895 author: Baker, Bernadette title: Normalizing Foucault? A Rhizomatic Approach to Plateaus in Anglophone Educational Research date: 2007-02-01 words: 19548 flesch: 33 summary: Foucault’s work is  38     Schrag, “Why Foucault Now?”, 375.  39     Ibid.   40     Ibid, 375  41     Robert  Dreeben,  On  What  is  Learned  in  School  (Reading,  MA:  Addison‐Wesley  Publishing Company, 1968)   42     Schrag, “Why Foucault Now?, 376.   90 Baker: Normalizing Foucault then  described  as  a  “hermeneutics  of  suspicion”  with  a  subsequent  heavy  reliance  on  Weberman’s  templating  of  disciplinary  power  to  explain  what  Foucault means by disciplinary.  A Rhizomatic Approach to Plateaus in Anglophone Educational Research   Bernadette Baker, University of Wisconsin In  a  recent  analysis  of  anglophone  scholarship,1  Baker  and  Heyning  considered both where and when Foucault’s name was made to live and also  analyzed the kinds of work such naming has performed, i.e., the substantive  claims made in the name of or through Foucault.2  keywords: analysis; approaches; baker; difference; discipleship; discipline; education; field; foucault; ibid; new; opening; paper; plateaus; point; power; reading; relation; research; scholarship; studies; vilification; ways; work cache: fous-895.pdf plain text: fous-895.txt item: #120 of 129 id: fous-896 author: Marshall, James title: On Being Agnostic: A Response to Bernadette Baker date: 2007-02-01 words: 3046 flesch: 57 summary: (Foucault too was steeped in the critiques  of Husserl).4 Yet Sartre was  to retain a notion of  ‘the subject’,  in a political  sense and use, as an owner of rights and as the bourgeois subject of emerging  social  management  and  economic  theories  in  the  social  sciences.  On  these  issues I will draw some parallels between the thinking of Sartre and Foucault.  keywords: consciousness; foucault; marshall; sartre; subject cache: fous-896.pdf plain text: fous-896.txt item: #121 of 129 id: fous-897 author: Baker, Bernadette title: Hypnotic Inductions: On the Persistence of the Subject: A Response to James Marshall date: 2007-02-01 words: 9896 flesch: 33 summary: The last genealogical works, the volumes of The History of Sexuality,18 were not  just  a  repositioning,  but  a  discussion  of  a  different  kind  of  subject:  “The  question I asked myself was this: how is it that the human subject took itself  as an object of possible knowledge?  This is my question: at what  price can subjects speak the truth about themselves?”.19  The subject that is criticized in the Foreword to The Order of Things and  in  parts  of Power/Knowledge  (and  its  key  referent, Discipline and Punish:  the  Birth of the Prison)20 is the a priori phenomenological subject which should not  guide history‐writing. keywords: aporia; baker; discourse; foucault; history; language; madness; new; reason; studies; subject; things; transcendence cache: fous-897.pdf plain text: fous-897.txt item: #122 of 129 id: fous-898 author: Philo, Chris title: Michel Foucault, Psychiatric Power: Lectures at the Collège de France 1973-1974. Ed Jacques Lagrange. Trans Graham Burchell. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. date: 2007-02-01 words: 7169 flesch: 22 summary: Psychiatric power, disciplinary power, family power   The  lectures  are  about  ‘psychiatric  power’,  installed  during  the  nineteenth  century but, by the logic of Foucault’s account, still very much the base‐line of  the encounter today between the psychiatrist and the patient.  In  the  process,  the  lectures  suggest  important  continuities  between  the  ‘archaeological’  and  ‘genealogical’  strains  of  Foucault’s  earlier  and  later  inquiries,  less  the break between  them  that  is sometimes  trumpeted  in  the  secondary literature, and in this respect they inhabit similar ‘meta‐theoretical’  ground to the already‐published lecture series of both 1974‐1975 (Abnormal)  and  1976‐1976  (“Society  Must  be  Defended”).  keywords: asylum; family; foucault; history; lectures; madness; patient; power; psychiatric; truth cache: fous-898.pdf plain text: fous-898.txt item: #123 of 129 id: fous-899 author: Carrette, Jeremy title: Clare O'Farrell. Michel Foucault. London: SAGE, 2005 date: 2007-02-01 words: 1985 flesch: 42 summary: Indeed, what makes O’Farrell’s latest work so significant  is  precisely  the  attempt  to  make  Foucault  even  more  accessible  for  the  demands  of  the  cultural  theorist  while  integrating  new  material  from  the  archive (a fact which reveals how the relatively short length of the book and  the amount of work behind it are in great disproportion).  O’Farrell frames the  “prolific”, “evolving” and “changeable” nature of Foucault’s work creatively  inside her “layered approach” (something that looks at the same issue from  different angles  in each  third  of  the book) and  through her  five “toolbox”  concepts of order, history, truth, power and ethics, each of which is outlined  8 Dan Beer, Michel Foucault: Form and Power (Oxford: Legenda, 2002).  keywords: foucault; o’farrell; studies; work cache: fous-899.pdf plain text: fous-899.txt item: #124 of 129 id: fous-900 author: Lynch, Richard title: Janet Afary and Kevin B. Anderson, Foucault and the Iranian Revolution: Gender and the Seductions of Islamism, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2005. date: 2007-02-01 words: 3331 flesch: 45 summary: In  making  Foucaultʹs  essays  on  Iran  available  in  English,  and  in  providing  a  close  reading of those texts that contextualizes them in terms of Iranian politics and  Islamic tradition, Afary and Anderson have performed a significant service  for  English‐language  readers  of  Foucault,  and  for  students  of  Iranian  and  Islamic politics.    The appendix begins with an  interview, previously available only  in  Persian,  that  Foucault  gave  to  Baqir  Parham  during  his  first  visit  to  Iran,  followed  by  Foucaultʹs  published  articles  on  Iran.  keywords: afary; essays; foucault; history; iran; iranian cache: fous-900.pdf plain text: fous-900.txt item: #125 of 129 id: fous-901 author: Elden, Stuart title: Chris Philo. A Geographical History of Institutional Provision for the Insane from Medieval Times to the 1860s in England and Wales: The Space Reserved for Insanity. Lewiston: The Edwin Mellon Press, 2004 date: 2007-02-01 words: 2360 flesch: 45 summary: [Philo’s  emphasis]  or  with  rigorous  documentation”  (quoted  651).6  Such  a  reading  of  the  inherent  spatial  awareness of Foucault’s histories seems to me to give far more credibility to  geographers’ continued interest in Foucault than the shorter texts such as ‘Of  Other Spaces’ where he more explicitly spoke of these topics.7   The  second  key  element  is  the  way  in  which  The third element is the  empirical  richness  of  this  study,  which  provides  a  means  of  testing  and  challenging  Foucault’s  claims  within  a  sometimes  rather  different  context  from the overtly Francophone concerns of History of Madness.  keywords: foucault; history; madness; philo; work cache: fous-901.pdf plain text: fous-901.txt item: #126 of 129 id: fous-902 author: McLean, Sam title: Todd May. The Philosophy of Foucault. London: Acumen, 2006. date: 2007-02-01 words: 3030 flesch: 45 summary: 182-188, Feb 2007 REVIEW  Todd May, The Philosophy of Foucault (London: Acumen Press, 2006), 192 pp., £15.99., paperback, ISBN 1-84465- 057-X.     Todd  May’s The Philosophy of Foucault  is  part  of  the  Continental  European  Philosophy series ‘providing accessible and stimulating introductions to the  ideas  of  continental  thinkers  who  have  shaped  fundamental  aspects  of  European philosophy’.  It  is  clear  from  the  opening  chapter  that  May,  a  sophisticated commentator on and user of Foucault’s work, is able to deliver  both these things.   keywords: book; foucault; philosophy; question; work cache: fous-902.pdf plain text: fous-902.txt item: #127 of 129 id: fous-903 author: McCall, Corey title: Thomas Flynn, Sartre, Foucault, and Historical Reason, Volume One, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997. Thomas R. Flynn, Sartre, Foucault, and Historical Reason, Volume Two, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005 date: 2007-02-01 words: 3758 flesch: 43 summary: In  this review,  I shall  focus on  each of the volumes alone before discussing Flynn’s conclusions regarding the  complex relationship between Sartre and Foucault.  191 foucault studies, No 4, pp. 189-196 it  was  this  network  that  made  possible  the  individuals  we  term  Hobbes, Berkeley, Hume, or Condillac.6     Flynn certainly respects the gulf that separates Sartre from Foucault on the  problematic of historical reason. keywords: experience; flynn; foucault; history; individual; sartre cache: fous-903.pdf plain text: fous-903.txt item: #128 of 129 id: fous-904 author: None title: Vi opdaterer systemet date: None words: 12 flesch: 46 summary: Vi opdaterer systemet Vi opdaterer systemet... rauli.cbs.dk opdateres og er snart tilgængeligt. keywords: opdaterer cache: fous-904.htm plain text: fous-904.txt item: #129 of 129 id: fous-905 author: Chrulew, Matthew title: Alain Beaulieu and David Gabbard. (eds.) Michel Foucault and Power Today: International Multidisciplinary Studies in the History of the Present. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2006. date: 2007-02-01 words: 1718 flesch: 42 summary: Tracey Nicholls’ “It Does Too Matter: Michel Foucault, John Coltrane,  and  Dominant  Positions”  broaches  the  interesting  topic  of  Foucault  and  music, but in a restricted way.  201-204, Feb 2007 REVIEW  Alain Beaulieu and David Gabbard (eds.), Michel Foucault and Power Today: keywords: foucault; michel; power; work cache: fous-905.pdf plain text: fous-905.txt