Foucault News

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

Fiorani, Matteo. “Rationality, irrationality and irrationalism in the anti-institutional debate in psychiatry around the second half of the 1970s in italy.” European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 16, br. 2 (2020): 101-121.
DOI: 10.31820/ejap.16.2.5
Open access

Abstract
The movements and protests of 1968 worldwide criticized the traditional idea of normality. From the 1970s onwards, psychiatry and antipsychiatry became an ideological battleground centered on the boundaries between normality and madness. In this scenario, characterized by a deep cultural and political transformation within the Left, the traditional concept of rationality and its very connection with irrationality was called into question. As a consequence, the very ideal of reason was questioned. This paper will explore the debate on rationality, irrationality and irrationalism within the so-called anti-institutional psychiatry and its reception in the Italian New Left during the second half of the 1970s.

Keywords
Antipsychiatry; psychiatric reforms; New Left; Italy

Golder, Ben, How to do things with Foucault (legally) (February 2, 2021). SSRN

Abstract
In this essay I discuss the legal theorist, Peter Fitzpatrick’s, reading of philosopher, Michel Foucault. My intent is to show how and why Foucault was important to Fitzpatrick and what this reveals about the latter’s practices of reading. I characterise this particular reading in three ways. First, against the disciplinary tendency to assume that Foucault is more useful to lawyers for how he approaches law (as method), Fitzpatrick takes seriously what Foucault has to say about law as a conceptual matter. Fitzpatrick hence reads Foucault as a legal thinker. Secondly, Fitzpatrick does not restrict himself to the conventional archive of Foucauldian texts that legal scholars routinely consult, but reads more widely and creatively in his search for law. Thirdly, Fitzpatrick reads Foucault open-endedly and generously rather than instrumentally or dismissively – textual ambivalence and contradiction is always in his hands a source of creative possibility and insight. This leads into some concluding reflections about Fitzpatrick’s practice of critically re-reading thinkers – all thinkers, not simply Foucault.

Keywords:
Peter Fitzpatrick, Michel Foucault, legal theory, reading practices

Torres Apablaza, Iván. “Ethopolitical modulation of existence: an archeology of the political and ethical life in Michel Foucault” Las Torres de Lucca. International Journal of Political Philosophy Vol 10, No 18 (2021): 199-223
Open access

RESUMEN
El artículo tiene por propósito fundamentar la presencia de una reconceptualización de lo político en el pensamiento de Michel Foucault, teniendo por clave de lectura la ethopolítica como propuesta conceptual. Se reconoce allí un concepto completamente enfrentado al modo en que la gubernamentalidad moderna, así como la tradición de pensamiento político, han entendido el sentido de la política en Occidente. Siguiendo este propósito, se plantea y desarrolla la hipótesis según la cual, el gesto analítico que persiste en el pensamiento de Michel Foucault es el de un concepto de lo político que afirma la vida en su radical exuberancia y desfundamentación. En dicha afirmación, se reconocen las signaturas de una estructura conceptual triangular, conformada por el pliegue entre vida, ética y poder. Luego de exponer el problema y despejar algunas dificultades metodológicas para su abordaje, se examinan en detalle las investigaciones que comprenden la arqueología de la vida ética en el filósofo francés. Se argumenta que la textualidad misma de la ethopolítica se formula como politicidad antes que como una política determinada, es decir, que se presenta como una política de la vida, puesto que la implica como modulación singular de la existencia. El artículo concluye con un umbral escritural compuesto de cinco tesis que intentan ampliar y proyectar hacia un programa de investigación, los rendimientos filosófico-políticos del análisis desarrollado.

PALABRAS CLAVE
Política; ética; poder; vida; biopolítica; ethopolítica.

ABSTRACT
The article aims to base the presence of a reconceptualization of the political in Michel Foucault’s thought, taking as the reading key ethopolitics as a conceptual proposal. There, we can find a concept completely opposed to the way in which both modern governmentality and the tradition of political thought have understood the meaning of politics in the West. Following this purpose, the hypothesis is proposed and developed, according to which the analytical gesture that persists in Michel Foucault’s thought is a concept of the political that affirms life in its radical exuberance and unfoundedness. In this statement, we recognize the signatures of a triangular conceptual structure made up of the fold between life, ethics and power. After exposing the problem and clearing some methodological difficulties for its approach, we examine in detail the investigations that comprise the archeology of ethical life in the French philosopher. It is argued that the very textuality of ethopolitics is formulated as politicity rather than as a specific policy, that is, it is presented as a politics of life, since it is implied as a singular modulation of existence. The article concludes with a scriptural threshold composed of five theses that attempt to expand and project the philosophical-political returns of the analysis developed towards a research program.

KEY WORDS
Politics; Ethics; Power; Life; Biopolitics; Ethopolitics.

Tom Roach, Screen Love. Queer Intimacies in the Grindr Era, SUNY Press.

Engaging analysis of men-seeking-men media as paradoxical sites of both self-marketing and radical queer sociality.

In work, play, education, and even healthcare, we are using social media during COVID-19 to approximate “normal life” before the pandemic. In Screen Love, Tom Roach urges us to do the opposite. Rather than highlight the ways that social media might help reproduce the pre-pandemic status quo, Roach explores how Grindr and other dating/hookup apps can help us envision a radically new normal: specifically, antinormative conceptions of selfhood and community. Although these media are steeped in neoliberal relational and communicative norms, they offer opportunities to reconceive subjectivity and ethics in ways that defy normative psychological and sexual paradigms. In the virtual cruise, Roach argues, we might experience a queer sociability in which participants are formally interchangeable avatar-objects. On Grindr and other m4m platforms, a model of selfhood championed in liberal-humanist traditions—an intelligent, altruistic, eloquent, and emotionally expressive self—is often a liability. By teasing out the queer ethical and political potential of an antisocial, virtual fungibility, Roach compels readers to think twice about media typically dismissed as sordid, superficial, and narcissistic. Written for students, professors, and nonacademics alike, Screen Love is an accessible, provocative, and at times subversively funny read.

“Tired of being a square on a virtual grid? Lean into it; relish your interchangeability. Can’t find love online? Rethink your relationship goals; enjoy the sensual nonsense of the cruise. In Screen Love, Tom Roach extends the arguments developed in his seminal Friendship as a Way of Life to consider the shared estrangements constitutive of contemporary screen-mediated intimacies. In the emphatically queer tradition of antisociality, Roach offers a series of brilliant, and fun, meditations on the radical ethical potential of impersonality, virtual fungibility, and embracing the sameness of our irreducible differences. My own takeaway? Get over yourself if you want to better make an art of your (impersonal) life.” — Shaka McGlotten, author of Virtual Intimacies: Media, Affect, and Queer Sociality

“With a raucous sensibility and a light touch, Tom Roach reads the screened aesthetics of neoliberal fungibility not as a trap, but as an invitation to explore its queer, world-making potential.” — Shannon Winnubst, author of Way Too Cool: Selling Out Race and Ethics

“Wonderfully thought-provoking and incisive, this book made me feel as if I were engaged in an interesting conversation with its author.” — Greg Goldberg, author of Antisocial Media: Anxious Labor in the Digital Economy

Tom Roach is Professor of Philosophy and Cultural Studies at Bryant University. He is the author of Friendship as a Way of Life: Foucault, AIDS, and the Politics of Shared Estrangement, also published by SUNY Press.

Ramírez-García, V. The Administration of Desire: Governmentality and Sexual Politics in Mexico’s Demographic Shift of the 1970s. Sexuality Research and Social Policy volume 17, pp. 741–752 (2020).
DOI:10.1007/s13178-020-00430-4
Open access

Abstract
Introduction

In 1974 Mexico adopted a new Population Act which marked a turning point in its policies of migration, fertility and education; this new legislation embraced population as a set of collective regularities ruled by intelligible laws which the state was impelled to administer.
Methods
Cabinet research in historical archives of 292 documents from the National Population Council in Mexico, published during the first decade of its formulation and implementation (1974-1984).
Results
Mexican demographic shift of the 1970s shows the emergence of a new rationality of power and knowledge through the consolidation of governmentality as a complex network of practices and discourses, mostly in the fields of education and health.
Conclusions
There was an effort to reshape the subjectivity of individuals through the incitement and stimulation of a new political rationality, that of governmentality, embracing responsibility vis-à-vis the ‘sexual reproduction function’, a function which was attached to the reproduction of social structures like marriage and family.
Policy Implications
I argue that this particular case can contribute to the study of similar political and epistemic tendencies in other contexts, especially on the analysis of the intersection between family planning and sex education policies.

Georgette Bajada, Anne-Marie Callus & Kurt Borg (2021) Unpretentious education: a Foucaultian study of inclusive education in Malta, Disability & Society, Published online: 27 Jan 2021
DOI: 10.1080/09687599.2021.1874877

Abstract
This article adopts a theoretical perspective inspired from the work of Michel Foucault to explore the experience of disabled students in Malta. In particular, it studies the discourses and educational practices of five students and their educators. The research explores the idea that students’ voices should be imperative in their Individualised Educational Plan (IEP). The article argues that, although inclusive education is presented as a more progressive and emancipatory model, it is still ridden with similar problems associated with the older paradigm of ‘special education needs’. Disabled students remain individualised, labelled, categorised, treated with special consideration and held personally accountable for their unsuccessful integration in the mainstream educational system. Consequently, the article proposes the idea that genuine inclusive education entails the notion of unpretentious education, that is, the necessity that educators silence their dominant voices; brush aside the hegemonic effects of culturally defined and socially constructed discourses and practices; call out and avoid normalising ways of distinguishing between students; and appreciate the magnitude of the voice of disabled students.

Points of interest
The article explores the experience of disabled students in Malta.

Inclusive education is still associated with special education needs.

Education is truly inclusive when educators do not assume that they know everything about disability.

We should listen to disabled students’ voices and rethink the way we talk about inclusive education, the way we practise it, and the way we think about disabled students.

It is hoped that, then, disabled students will feel that they truly belong in schools, where difference is truly accepted.

It is then that each disabled student can exclaim, ‘being different is okay!’

Keywords: Inclusive education, Foucault, disabled children, critical disability studies

Covid-19 no Brasil e diagnóstico do presente: análise do discurso e biopolítica, Revista Ética e Filosofia Política, v. 2 n. 23 (2020): Episteme e Práxis
DOI: 10.34019/2448-2137.2020.33287
Open access

Resumo
A partir do pano de fundo da gestão política da pandemia de COVID-19, este artigo visa apresentar e discutir a noção foucaultiana de biopolítica articulando esta não apenas à questão da gestão política da vida, mas também com a especificidade de uma abordagem arqueo-genealógica. Neste sentido, destacamos a função da história e da análise do discurso na construção de um diagnóstico do presente, o que ajuda a destacar a especificidade do pensamento foucaultiano. Sustentamos hipótese de que a abordagem foucaultiana da biopolítica necessita de ajustes para a compreensão da gestão brasileira da pandemia. O principal ajuste seria a análise dos efeitos de centenas de anos de escravidão na sociedade brasileira. Contudo, o pensamento foucaultiano permite enxergar as racionalidades estratégicas de discursos que aparentam ser apenas irracionais, absurdos ou notícias falsas, os quais foram importantes no caso brasileiro. A exposição de milhões de pessoas aos riscos de contaminação é compreendida enquanto a radicalização de um corte biopolítico, constituído de modo sócio-histórico, que separa vidas que merecem ser protegidas de vidas que podem ou devem ser expostas ao risco de morte e outras decorrências da contaminação.

Palavras-chave: biopolítica; diagnóstico do presente; genealogia; pandemia; discurso.

Abstract in English
This article intends to present and discuss the foucaultian notion of biopolitcs in its content not only of the the political management of life, but also the specificities of an archeogenealogical approach, having as a background the political management of the COVID-19 pandemics. We emphasize the function of history and the analysis of discourse to the construction of a diagnostic of the present, which helps to emphasize the specificity of the foucaultian approach. We also suggest that the foucaultian approach of biopolitics to understand the pandemics needs some adjustments in order to comprehend the Brazilian management of the pandemics. The main problem is the effects of hundreds of years of slavery to the constitution of Brazilian society. Nevertheless, foucaultian toughth can provide an understanding of the strategic rationality of discourses that appears to be just irrational, absurd or just fake news, but had a great importance to the Brazilian case. The exposal of millions of people to the risk of contamination is understood as a radicalization of a socially and historically biopolitical cut which separates lives that must be defended from those which ought to be exposed to the risks of death and other effects of contamination.

Keywords: biopolitics; diagnose of the present; genealogy; pandemics; discourse

Federico Jose Lagdameo, Normalizing the Population: The Biopolitics of the “New Normal”, Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture XXIV.1 (2020): 67–97.
Open access

Abstract
While the whole world is trying to get its bearings in the face of the radical changes brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, two prevailing attitudes or approaches have emerged: (1) a yearning for a return to pre-COVID-19 normalcy typified by what I call the “typhoon-shelter approach” and (2) recognizing the irreversibility of the current condition and seeking to establish a “new normal.” The biopolitical analysis employed in this paper reveals unintended consequences that slip through the mesh of traditional forms of critique centered on capital, ideology, or class conflict. Specifically, the “new normal” project prevents the free movement of peoples while ensuring the continuous flow of data through what Luciano Floridi calls the “infosphere.” This politics instills a xenophobia in which the other is construed as a disease while migrating the population to the realm of virtual reality.

Keywords
biopolitics; COVID-19; Foucault; infosphere; normalization; pandemic

stuartelden's avatarProgressive Geographies

Stuart Elden, The Early Foucault – Polity, June 2021

Three really generous endorsements for the book, from people whose own work I really admire.

‘Elden’s compendious coverage of Foucault’s intellectual career constitutes the contemporary apogee of scholarship on Foucault.’
Mark G. E. Kelly, Western Sydney University

‘This is a work of immense scholarship. Stuart Elden provides a wealth of contextual information on Foucault’s less familiar early career.’
Clare O’Farrell, Queensland University of Technology

‘Stuart Elden’s comprehensive, finely crafted investigation of the early Foucault is much more than a contribution to Foucault studies. It’s an exemplary guide to writing intellectual history.’
Michael J. Shapiro, University of Hawai’i, Manoa

The proofs and index for the book are complete, so just waiting to see the finished thing. Here’s the back cover description:

It was not until 1961 that Foucault published his first major book,History ofMadness. He had been working as an…

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Social Theory and the Politics of Higher Education. Critical Perspectives on Institutional Research
Editors: Mark Murphy, Ciaran Burke, Cristina Costa, Rille Raaper, Bloomsbury

Social Theory and the Politics of Higher Education brings together an international group of scholars who shine a theoretical light on the politics of academic life and higher education. The book covers three key areas:

1) Institutional governance, with a specific focus on issues such as measurement, surveillance, accountability, regulation, performance and institutional reputation.
2) Academic work, covering areas such as the changing nature of academic labour, neoliberalism and academic identity, and the role of gender and gender studies in university life.
3) Student experience, which includes case studies of student politics and protest, the impact of graduate debt and changing student identities.

The editors and chapter authors explore these topics through a theoretical lens, using the ideas of Michel Foucault, Niklas Luhmann, Barbara Adams, Donna Massey, Margaret Archer, Jürgen Habermas, Pierre Bourdieu, Hartmut Rosa, Norbert Elias and Donna Haraway, among others. The case studies, from Africa, Europe, Australia and South America, draw on a wide range of research approaches, and each chapter includes a set of critical reflections on how social theory and research methodology can work in tandem.