Foucault News

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

Theoretical Puppets, I is for Information Technology (Michel Foucault)
Sep 27, 2021

Kathryn Hughes, Magritte: A Life by Alex Danchev review – virtuosic portrait of a star surrealist, The Guardian, 9 December 2021

Alex Danchev, Magritte: A Life – Profile, November 2021

Given the ubiquity of René Magritte’s images in our culture it is a shock to learn that no one was interested in the Belgian surrealist until it was almost too late. All those bowler-hatted men with occluded faces, the pipe that isn’t a pipe, the giant apples and the looming clouds were hard to like and difficult to sell until 1965, when a major retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York put him explosively on the map. Suddenly everyone from Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein to a young Ed Ruscha couldn’t get enough of Magritte’s visual teases, linguistic puzzles and deadpan affect, which made banal objects – combs, matchsticks, bird cages – at once uncanny and irresistible.
[…]
No surprise, then, that decades later post-structuralists including Derrida and Foucault couldn’t get enough of Magritte’s images, which on the surface pass as gags, but which actually comprised a profound meditation on the instability of meaning in the modern world.

With thanks to Stuart Elden at Progressive Geographies for this news

Lennard Davis, In the Time of Pandemic, the Deep Structure of Biopower Is Laid Bare, Critical Inquiry, Volume 47, Number S2, 26 June 2020
https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10.1086/711458
Open access

In regard to disability, the ableism that puts on a compassionate mask in milder times now reveals its brutal face. While laws like the Americans with Disabilities Act acknowledge human rights and subjectivities involved in disabled identity, a pandemic brings into play a war of survival whose rules are simpler and deadlier. Limited resources and pressured levels of triage create a situation in which medical decisions have to be made quickly and almost reflexively. When those kinds of pressured judgments occur, health practitioners must rely on a wartime gut reaction as well as a combination of health ethics templates and cost-benefit analyses assessing whose life is worth saving and whose is less so.

Any metric used for determining who should get limited resources will inevitably be drawn into a eugenics sinkhole. It is here that biopolitics and thanatopolitics display a unity that might have seemed to have been in opposition. The urge to let live and the urge to let die morph nicely into each other. In order to let live, doctors must let die. An unenviable choice arises at every tension point in every hospital in every country. This proliferation of life/death decisions blunts the emotional response to what might be seen as programmed executions or even annihilations. While biopolitics and thanatopolitics have been drawn to dramatic personae like the comatose patient and the concentration camp prisoner, the more mundane bit players—the person with mobility impairments or the cognitively disabled person—barely get attention. Those in disability studies are well aware of this minor role assigned by the majority to the minority. Yet the actuality is that the disabled or Deaf person experiences the effects of communitas and immunity on a rather consistent and, to others, undetectable basis.

[…]
In some sense, the discussion over the healthy person is a discussion about the formation of the modern citizen. As Michel Foucault and others have noted, the development of a medical system is of course also a system of control. If it works well, it is hidden and undetectable—powered by self will rather than heavy-handed regulation. And the system has worked very well, until now when the evolution of the word health suddenly becomes more clearly a way of talking about power and setting one group over another.
[…]

Bernard-Henri Lévy, Journal d’Amérique, La Règle du Jeu – Littérature, Philosophie, Politique, Art, novembre 2021

Présentant outre-Atlantique son film «Une autre idée du monde» («The Will to See»), Bernard-Henri Lévy confie ses impressions d’Amérique.

Ici, aux États-Unis, mon livre et mon film s’intitulent The Will to See. J’aime cette tonalité nietzschéenne, ou foucaldienne, dans un pays qui s’obstine à transformer Michel Foucault, cet adversaire des pensées identitaires, en père fondateur de la pensée woke. Ce n’est pas de ça, pourtant, que je viens parler, ce matin, à l’invitation de l’Institut des États-Unis pour la paix, le think tank bipartisan du Congrès, présidé par l’ex-humanitaire onusienne Lise Grande. Je raconte mon dernier séjour en Afghanistan et explique que les vingt années de présence des GI ne furent pas un échec mais un succès. Femmes dévoilées, naissance d’une presse libre, lente mais sûre éclosion d’une société civile : c’est tout cela que Joe Biden et, avant lui, Donald Trump ont saccagé en offrant le pouvoir aux talibans. Munich américain.
[…]

For a review of the film in The Atlantic see The French Intellectual Who Refuses to Look Away

Renata Cavalcanti Muniz,Fiorella Macchiavello Ferradas,Georgina M. Gomez,Lee J. Pegler, Covid-19 in Brazil in an era of necropolitics: resistance in the face of disaster, Disasters, 07 December 2021
https://doi.org/10.1111/disa.12528
Open access

Abstract
The Covid-19 pandemic has been a massive disaster in Brazil, causing more than 350,000 deaths as of April 2021. Moreover, President Jair Bolsonaro suggested that already marginalised groups should take what came to them, as if they were an expendable surplus in his necropolitical perspective. However, civil society initiatives are emerging to tackle the impacts of this crisis. This paper adds to current literature on the forms and levels of resistance to disasters, using primary and secondary data pertaining to three key Brazilian groups: domestic workers; the urban poor in favelas; and indigenous Amazonians. The analysis indicates that their historical, political resistance has been a foundation upon which to develop disaster mitigation and their actions have built on and gone beyond previous modes of organising. More specifically, their responses have replaced a ‘present–absent’ federal government, entailed local, innovative adaptations, led to new public–private sector relations, and may offer the prospect of consolidation.

Kurtuluş, G. & İnci, M. (2021), “Kapitalizm Sahnesinde Yeni Bir Aktör: Sosyal Girişimler”, Fiscaoeconomia, 5(1), 21-37

https://doi.org/10.25295/fsecon.795353

Abstract
With the termination of welfare state practices in many countries, the task of meeting the needs of the society was handed over to the initiative of neoliberal policies. On the other hand, those who argue that there can be an alternative other than the public and private sectors have started to organise under the name of social economy. However, most of the social economy institutions, also called the third sector, do not have full independence from the state and the market. One of the most tangible examples of this is social enterprises. The main feature of social enterprises; is making social and environmental issues a priority. In other words, social enterprises assert that they differentiate themselves from other enterprises by emphasizing that profit maximization is not their main goal. However, the concept causes some uncertainties both in itself and in terms of functioning. The main purpose of the study is to present a critical perspective that social enterprises do not really represent an alternative to the market. In this context, first of all, the relationship of social enterprises with the public sector has been handled within the framework of Foucault’s power analysis. Based on the “Kitap Koala” interview in the method section and the findings obtained from other sources were analyzed with descriptive analysis. The distance of social enterprises to the private sector has been evaluated through this analysis.

Keywords:
Foucault, Kitap Koala, Power Analysis, Social Economy, Social Enterprise

Öz
Refah devleti uygulamalarının birçok ülkede sonlandırılmasıyla toplumun ihtiyaçlarını karşılama görevi neoliberal politikaların inisiyatifine bırakılmıştır. Buna karşılık, kamu ve özel sektörün dışında bir alternatif olabileceğini savunanlar sosyal ekonomi adı altında örgütlenmeye başlamışlardır. Ancak üçüncü sektör olarak da adlandırılan sosyal ekonomi kuruluşlarının çoğunun devletten ve piyasadan tam bağımsızlığı söz konusu değildir. Bunun en somut örneklerinden biri sosyal girişimlerdir. Sosyal girişimler, kâr maksimizasyonunun temel amaçları olmadığını vurgulayarak kendilerini diğer girişimlerden farklı görmektedirler. Bununla birlikte, kavram hem kendi içinde hem de işleyiş bakımından birtakım soru işaretlerine sebep olmaktadır. Çalışmanın temel amacı, sosyal girişimlerin piyasaya gerçekten bir alternatif oluşturmadığını eleştirel bir bakış açısıyla sunmaktır. Bu kapsamda öncelikle sosyal girişimlerin, kamu sektörü ile ilişkisi Foucault’nun iktidar analizi çerçevesinde ele alınmıştır. Yöntem kısmında yer alan “Kitap Koala” söyleşisi ve diğer kaynaklardan elde edilen bulgular betimsel analiz ile çözümlenmiştir. Sosyal girişimlerin özel sektöre olan mesafesi ise bu analiz üzerinden değerlendirilmiştir.

Anahtar Kelimeler: Foucault, İktidar Analizi, Kitap Koala, Sosyal Ekonomi, Sosyal Girişim

Theoretical Puppets Michel Foucault meets Walter Benjamin, Nov 2, 2020

Michele Spanò, Towards a juridical archaeology of primitive accumulation. A reading of Foucault’s Penal Theories and Institutions, Radical Philosophy, 2, 11, December 2021
Translated by Alberto Toscano

Open access

The virtual dimensions of a project
The implicit diptych formed by the two successive courses delivered by Michel Foucault at the Collège de France between 1971 and 1973 – Penal Theories and Institutions and The Punitive Society – has already been the object of substantial commentary. The principal gains arising from philological or speculative soundings of these courses can be easily placed under two very general rubrics: first, the relation – never so explicit nor seemingly so benevolent – that Foucault entertained with categories drawn from the Marxian workshop; second, the function – never as central but no less ambiguous for that – that he assigns to law. Two rubrics that seem to flaunt a decisively anti-Foucauldian character, if the run-of-the-mill and vague understanding of his genealogical project generally connects a description of power relations irreducible to relations of production, on the one hand, with a visceral and obsessive critique of the ‘juridical’ form of power itself, on the other.

[…]

Étienne Balibar, Human species as biopolitical concept, Radical Philosophy, 2.11 (December 2021)
Open access

I submit that the current situation created by the Covid-19 pandemic and its biopolitical consequences reveals something new in the ontological status of the human species which also involves an anthropological ‘revolution’. 1 This is something more than the fact that the combined tendencies called ‘globalisation’ (which, regardless of whether we assign them a recent or ancient origin, have clearly crossed a line at the end of the twentieth century) have resulted in relativising frontiers or distances, and subjected all human societies to a single system of economic interdependencies, thus realising something of the Marxian prediction (in the German Ideology) that every singular being would relate to every other, when the development of their ‘productive forces’ has reached ‘the stage of totality’. 2 It is also not the same as the fact that environmental consequences of global warming, of industrial waste and consumerist pollutions, plus the destruction of biodiversity are now affecting the whole planet and its populations. Of course the links of the Anthropocene with this type of pandemic do clearly exist. But what I want to discuss is something more directly linked to our self-definition as a ‘species’, working at a more elementary level.
[…]

Michael Quinn, Bentham, Polity, 2021

Jeremy Bentham – philosopher, theorist of law and of the art of government – was among the most influential figures of the early nineteenth century, and the approach he pioneered – utilitarianism – remains central to the modern world.

In this new introduction to his ideas, Michael Quinn shows how Bentham sought to be an engineer or architect of choices and to illuminate the methods of influencing human conduct to good ends, by focusing on how people react to the various physical, legal, institutional, normative and cultural factors that confront them as decision-makers. Quinn examines how Bentham adopted utility as the critical standard for the development and evaluation of government and public policy, and explains how he sought to apply this principle to a range of areas, from penal law to democratic reform, before concluding with an assessment of his contemporary relevance. He argues that Bentham simultaneously sought both to facilitate the implementation of governmental will and to expose misrule by rendering all exercises of public power transparent to the public on whose behalf it was exercised.

This book will be essential reading for any student or scholar of Bentham, as well as those interested in the history of political thought, philosophy, politics, ethics and utilitarianism.