Foucault News

News and resources on French thinker Michel Foucault (1926-1984)

Xenia Chiaramonte, Bio-story. Michel Foucault and the history of social medicine. In Eds. Marta-Laura Cenedese, Clio Nicastro, Violence, Care, Cure. Self/perceptions within the Medical Encounter, Routledge, 2025

Abstract
In October 1974, Foucault gave three lectures in Rio de Janeiro on the archaeology of the cure. This piece will comment on the first two, published a few years later in France with the original titles ‘Crise de la médicine ou crise de l’antimédicine?’ and ‘La naissance de la médicine sociale’. Bio-history is the term Michel Foucault initially uses – in the second lecture – to refer to the effect of the strong medical intervention at the biological level, which started in the eighteenth century and has left a trace that is still visible in our society. It is on this occasion that Foucault introduces the concept, or rather the prefix, ‘bio’ in his analysis, and it is here – as my reflections intend to demonstrate – that we may trace the original meaning of a term that today seems rather abused, in order to find a valuable analytical framework for a cogent approach to the relationship between medicine and power dynamics.

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