Foucault News

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

Izsó, J. Foucault, Simon Springer, and Postneoliberalism
(2019) Review of Radical Political Economics, 51 (1), pp. 147-157.

DOI: 10.1177/0486613417703200

Abstract
Scholarship in Foucauldian governmentality has reemerged as a critical area of contemporary political discourse and has had a pronounced effect on neoliberal and postneoliberal research in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. Perhaps the most versatile postneoliberal critic is Simon Springer, who has offered dynamic accounts of neoliberalism and its decline via a Foucauldian method. While Springer’s research is novel, I believe it is not a rigorous Foucauldian account of neoliberalism and its future. JEL Classification: B00, F01, N00. © 2018 Union for Radical Political Economics.

Author Keywords
Foucault; neoliberalism; neoliberalization; ontology; postneoliberalism

FORMAT19: All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace by Leah Gordon

Exhibition at Format 19 Forever//Now Festival of photography
FORMAT19 – University of Derby, Derby 15th March – 14th April

[…]
In Michel Foucault’s book Discipline and Punish, the author moves the panopticon beyond a function of discipline into an apparatus of power, a concept further developed in Adam Curtis’s film All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace, the name taken by Gordon for her project about the modern panopticon, air traffic control towers.

The air traffic control tower, argues Gordon, is a benign panopticon, exemplifying protective surveillance as airplanes take off and land in airports all over the world, making flying one of the safest forms of transport. It has become an enduring graceful symbol of a form of progress which protects and enables, resistant to critique, forever and now.

Daniel J. Schultz, “Elephants, Dreams, and Sex: Reading Religion in Foucault’s Ethics,” The Journal of Religion 99, no. 2 (April 2019): 173-193.
DOI: 10.1086/701870

Giltner, T.A. The power unto glory: A Bonaventurean critique of Foucault’s critique of power
(2019) Scottish Journal of Theology, 72 (1), pp. 82-97.

DOI: 10.1017/S0036930618000686

Abstract
This article puts Michel Foucault’s conception of power into critical engagement with that of Bonaventure. For Foucault power is manifested in wills to knowledge or meaning-making in a senseless universe in order to legitimate the drama of dominations. Bonaventure, however, roots his notion of power in the essence of God, so that any act of power from God cannot be classified as domination, but rather donation-a free-willed gift. This is especially evident in Bonaventure’s theology of creation and sacrament. As such, Bonaventure provides a way to deal with Foucault’s critique theologically without dispensing with it altogether.

Author Keywords
Bonaventure; gift; infinity; Michel Foucault; power; sacrament

Valladares, C., Boelens, R. Mining for Mother Earth. Governmentalities, sacred waters an nature’s rights in Ecuador (2019) Geoforum, 100, pp. 68-79.

DOI: 10.1016/j.geoforum.2019.02.009

Abstract
Getting public opinion to see ‘mining’ and ‘Nature’s Rights’ as non-contradictory and even equivalent and harmonious, calls for far-reaching power strategies. Nature was entitled to rights by Ecuador’s Constitution at about the same time that the Government began promoting mining as central to Ecuador’s future. Building this equivalence to make ‘mining mean nature’, and materialize large-scale mining in the Quimsacocha páramo wetlands, the State and its institutions tested new tactics to manage territory, coined new imaginaries and subjectivities, and limited indigenous/rural political participation. In response, communities started to dispute these governmentality strategies through political practices that framed new meanings of territory and identity. They use formal political and legal arenas but, above all, their day-to-day practices. This article analyzes forms of power and counter-power in the Quimsacocha páramo mining conflict, through the four different, inter-related ‘arts of government’ (Foucault, 2008) and mutual strategies by promoters and detractors of extractive industry who, in apparent paradox, both appeal to Nature’s Rights. We conclude that using Nature’s Rights to promote mega-mining manifests the limitations of social and environmental rights recognition under neoliberal governance, and the tensions inherent in Nature’s Rights themselves. However, anti-extraction struggles like Quimsacocha’s critically make visible as well as challenge the development model and economic system that is implicit in the debate over Nature’s Rights, inviting us to re-think the socio-natural order and foster more just, equitable alternatives. © 2019 Elsevier Ltd

Author Keywords
Cultural politics; Ecuador; Governmentality; Mining; Rights of nature

Index Keywords
environmental legislation, governance approach, mining, political conflict, political participation, public attitude, state role; Ecuador

Round Table: Foucault, neoliberalism and ideology
March 27 2019
New School for Social Research, New York

Thomas Skorucak, Le courage des gouvernés. Michel Foucault et Hannah Arendt, Paris: CNRS Editions, 2019

En ces temps marqués par la grande désillusion des citoyens face au politique, alors même que l’action collective est plus que jamais nécessaire, n’est-il pas urgent de réactualiser la notion de courage ? Mais comment penser ce courage loin de l’image d’une posture héroïque, apanage exclusif des puissants et des natures exceptionnelles, représentation à laquelle nous l’avons trop souvent cantonné ?

Ce courage des citoyens, cette vertu des gouvernés, Thomas Skorucak la met en scène dans des procès emblématiques où s’affrontent l’autorité et la vérité. Procès de Socrate et Galilée où le vrai s’est progressivement imposé comme source unique de l’autorité. Procès des criminels nazis où est patente la difficulté à s’affirmer face au pouvoir de sujétion de la vérité et à la démultiplication des régimes d’obéissance.

Comment dès lors élaborer une forme de courage qui serait une élaboration quotidienne et patiente de soi par soi, résistante à l’emprise du pouvoir sur notre conduite ? La question n’a rien de rhétorique. Michel Foucault et Hannah Arendt ouvrent la voie, revenant tous deux à l’Antiquité et à la figure tutélaire de Socrate. Ils permettent de penser un courage sans référence à aucune transcendance, comme fidélité à soi-même, ou comme stylistique de l’existence.

Une tentative de désassujettissement, dont l’actualité n’est pas à démontrer.

Thomas SKORUCAK
Docteur en philosophie politique, spécialiste de Michel Foucault, Thomas Skorucak exerce aujourd’hui au sein de l’Institut d’Études Occurrence comme directeur d’études

Editor: I just came across this. A competition for a picture of Foucault for a website. There are 35 entries. The competition was run by Kai Erikson who runs the Diiple site

GTA-style cover illustration about Michel Foucault

Contest Brief

We are a new lifestyle brand that designs high-quality and exciting americana-inspired casual wear for socially aware young adults. Initially, the target group consist mainly of university students. In addition to our online store, we are developing interesting infographics for our coming website. The intention is to create a website in which many contemporary figures and concepts from the different fields of theory and culture are given a short surveys in the form of data visualization. Although the information given is fact-based and researched specifically for this purpose, the visual presentation will be rather playful, colorful and fun.

Now, what we would like to get is a cover illustration about the French philosopher Michel Foucault.

VII Coloquio Latinoamericano de Biopolitica
Ontologías del presente

PDF – Full information and details
Facebook page

PRESENTACION´
Con el objeto de potenciar el desarrollo del pensamiento crítico en América Latina, se convoca, con el apoyo y patrocinio de diversas universidades chilenas, a los investigadores e investigadoras interesados a presentar trabajos al VII Coloquio de Biopolítica: Ontologías del Presente, a realizarse entre los días 30 de septiembre y 3 de octubre de 2019 en Santiago de Chile

Social Work and Neoliberalism: The Trondheim Papers, European Journal of Social Work,, vol 22 2019

A number of the papers in this special issue refer to Foucault’s work.