Foucault News

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

Paul Patton, Government, rights and legitimacy: Foucault and liberal political normativity, European Journal of Political Theory May 5, 2015

doi: 10.1177/1474885115582077

Abstract
One way to characterise the difference between analytic and Continental political philosophy concerns the different roles played by normative and descriptive analysis in each case. This article argues that, even though Michel Foucault’s genealogy of liberal and neoliberal governmentality and John Rawls’s political liberalism involve different articulations of normative and descriptive concerns, they are complementary rather than antithetical to one another. The argument is developed in three stages: first, by suggesting that Foucault offers a way to conceive of public reason as a historical phenomenon. Second, it is suggested that both Rawls and Foucault allow us to consider rights as historical and particular rather than a-historical and universal. Third, it is argued that Foucault’s genealogy of modern liberal government illuminates some of the tensions and some of the alternatives within the liberal tradition in relation to the concept of political legitimacy.

Foucault
governmentality
homo juridicus
homo oeconomicus
legitimacy
neoliberalism
public reason
Rawls
rights

Hamdi Nabli : “Le discours radical offre une binarisation du monde, il faut un discours alternatif”, Bondy Blog en partenariat avec Liberation, mardi 27 janvier 2015

Par Mathieu Blard

Influencé par les théories de Foucault et Baudrillard, Hamdi Nabli, politologue, livre son regard sur la radicalisation, le traitement médiatique et ses conséquences. Rencontre.

Vendredi 23 janvier, 10h Collège des Bernardins, dans le Ve arrondissement parisien, rendez vous avec Hamdi Nabli, politologue, auteur de La fraternité aryenne, l’esprit du terrorisme au cœur de l’Amérique blanche, et co-auteur de L’inégalité politique en démocratie.

Est-il possible de dégager les causes de radicalisation ?

Hamdi Nabli : Les causes sont plus ou moins connues. Les policiers et les criminologues en ont conscience, ce sont les inégalités économiques et sociales. C’est aussi la prison au cœur de la société française, autour de laquelle il y a une vraie hypocrisie. Il est dit que c’est un problème, alors que c’est un système fonctionnel. Comme le souligne Michel Foucault dans Surveiller et punir, on utilise la prison pour créer cette figure du délinquant qu’on va pouvoir ensuite attaquer dès qu’il va se passer quelque chose. La prison est l’institution phare de la société occidentale moderne. C’est elle qui fonde une société qui exclut, régie par le principe selon lequel celui qui enfreint la loi doit être hors la société. Ce n’est pas un problème de cas sociaux, c’est un problème de civilisation. L’exclusion est un problème central qui se voit aussi au niveau des territoires. Il existe une forme de ségrégation au cœur même de l’inclusion sociale.

suite

Prospects for an Ethics of Self-Cultivation

Introduction

Videos of this conference

‘Prospects for an Ethics of Self-Cultivation’ is a two-year research project investigating the revival of ethical self-cultivation within the European philosophical tradition.

The project will host two international conferences and workshops. The first, entitled ‘Hellenistic Ethics from Nietzsche to Foucault’, took place at the University of Warwick, UK in September 2014. The second, entitled ‘Modern Appraisals of the Hellenistic Legacy’, will be at Monash University’s campus in Prato, Italy in June 2015.

Theatre, Performance, Foucault!

 One-day symposium hosted by the Theatre, Performance and Philosophy working group of the Theatre and Performance Research Association (TaPRA)

 Saturday, 4th July 2015
King’s College London

K0.31 Small Committee Room, Strand London UK WC2R 2LS

Registration site

Welcome

9:30-10am Welcome, registration and tea/coffee

Session 1: Theatre/Foucault/Theatre
10am – 11:30am

Mark Robson (University of Dundee), “Foucault and Theatre: Playing Placeless Place”

Stuart Elden (University of Warwick), “Foucault and Shakespeare: Ceremony, Theatre and Politics”

Aline Wiame (Université Libre de Bruxelles), “Foucault’s Genealogical Theatre of Truth and its Impact on Performance Philosophy”

break

Interruption/Provocation 1: ‘Murmurs of Resemblance’
11:45am –12:15pm

P.A. Skantze (University of Roehampton), “The Table that Says Its Name”

Eleni Kolliopoulou (independent artist, Turin), “Dead can dance” and “8-9”

Lunch

12:15 – 1:30pm Please join us for lunch at Fernandez & Wells, in the Somerset House courtyard

Session 2: Forms, Methods and Methodologies
1:30pm – 3pm

Magnolia Pauker (Emily Carr University of Art and Design, University of British Columbia and European Graduate School), “Foucault Live! ‘A voice that still eludes the tomb of the text’”

Mischa Twitchin (Queen Mary, University of London), “Animating Masks”

Fay Brauer (University of East London and University of New South Wales), “Performing Biopouvoir: Body Culture, Scientia Sexualis and Eugenics”

break

Interruptions/Provocations 2: Time and the ‘Conduct of Souls’
3:15 – 3:30pm

Steve Potter (Goldsmiths, University of London / Cornell University), “Doing Time Together: Music, Chance, and the Security State”

Tea & coffee break
3:30 – 4pm

Session 3: Critical Historiography / Theatre and Performance Genealogies in the dix-neuvième
4pm – 5:15pm

Eve Katsouraki (University of East London), Chair “On the Interstices of Knowledge and Theatre Historiography: a Provocation”

Tony Fisher (Central School of Speech and Drama), “A Night at the Riot: the struggle against monopoly and the governmentalisation of the stage”

Kélina Gotman (King’s College London), “Archaeology, Genealogy, Choreography: Imagining Dance Histories in Motion”

Response
5:15 – 5:30pm

Sanja Perovic (King’s College London)

Symposium dinner and drinks

5:30pm Please join us for dinner and drinks at the India Club, upstairs from the Hotel Strand Continental, 143 Strand WC2R 1JA

Please note all attendees must register on our Eventbrite page:https://www.eventbrite.com/e/theatre-performance-foucault-tickets-17398034991. Registration is free for TaPRA members, and £10 for non-members. Spaces are limited, so advance registration is strongly advised.

Estudos Nietzsche: Special Issue on Foucault and Nietzsche, vol.5, no.1, jan./jun. 2014

Estudos Nietzsche is an open access journal. Full PDFs are available. All articles are in Portuguese

SUMÁRIO

Editorial

1. Editorial v. 5, n. 1 (jan./jun. 2014)
Ernani Chaves.

Artigos

1. Filosofia da cultura e escrita da história: Notas sobre as relações entre os projetos de uma genealogia da cultura em Foucault e Nietzsche

Philosophy of culture and writing of history: Notes on the relationship between the projects of a genealogy of culture in Foucault and Nietzsche
Oswaldo Giacoia Júnior.

2. Retesamentos discursivos: um olhar foucaultiano do estilo antidogmático de Nietzsche

Discursive stiffness: A Foucauldian approach of the antidogmatic style of Nietzsche
Carlos Eduardo Ribeiro, Alexandre Filordi de Carvalho.

3. O Nietzsche de Foucault, o Foucault de Nietzsche

The Nietzsche of Foucault, the Foucault of Nietzsche
Thiago Fortes Ribas.

4. O sol negro da linguagem: Nietzsche, Foucault e a questão do sentido

The dark sun of language: Nietzsche, Foucault and the question of meaning
Fabiano Lemos.

5. Por uma injustiça, dois Platões: tempo e genealogia em F. Nietzsche e M. Foucault

For one injustice, two Platos: time and genealogy in F. Nietzsche and M. Foucault
Felipe Figueiredo de Campos Ribeiro.

6. Prazer, sexualidade e normalização do real

Pleasure, sexuality and normalization of real
Giovana Carmo Temple, Malcom Guimarães Rodrigues.

7. Foucault, Nietzsche: teoria do conhecimento, teologia e crítica da modernidade

Foucault, Nietzsche: theory of knowledge, theology and modernity critique
Ricardo Bazilio Dalla Vecchia.

Resenhas

1. Nietzsche contra Darwin
Oscar Augusto Rocha Santos.


Foucault and May 1968

Published on 18 Jun 2015

François Ewald (CNAM), Bernard Harcourt (Columbia Law School, Columbia Center for Contemporary Critical Thought), and Jesús R. Velasco (LAIC Chair, Columbia University) delve into the influences and effects of Michel Foucault’s lectures at the College de France, Penal Theories and Institutions (1971-1972). The panelists explore how the social unrest of 1968 influenced Foucault as he began to work out theories on repressive disciplinary penal systems that he would develop fully in one of his most important works, Discipline and Punish.

fs-19New issue
Foucault Studies
Number 19: Disability

Foucault Studies is an open access journal and full PDFs of the articles can be found on the website.

Table of Contents

Editorial
Sverre Raffnsøe, Alain Beaulieu, Sam Binkley, Barbara Cruikshank, Knut Ove Eliassen, Marius Gudmand-Høyer, Johanna Oksala, Sven Opitz, Jyoti Puri, Jens Erik Kristensen, Alan Rosenberg, Jeppe Groot

This issue includes:

Special Issue: New Work on Foucault and Disability

New Work on Foucault and Disability: An Introductory Note
Shelley Tremain 4-6

This Is What a Historicist and Relativist Feminist Philosophy of Disability Looks Like
Shelley Tremain 7-42

Desiring Disability Differently: Neoliberalism, Heterotopic Imagination and Intra-corporeal Reconfigurations
Kelly Fritsch 43-66

Genealogies of Disability in Global Governance: A Foucauldian Critique of Disability and Development
Xuan-Thuy Nguyen 67-83

Neoliberalism and Disability: The Possibilities and Limitations of a Foucauldian Critique
Scott Yates 84-107

Historical Epistemology as Disability Studies Methodology: From the Models Framework to Foucault’s Archaeology of Cure
Aimi Hamraie 108-134

Articles

Foucault on Ethics and Subjectivity: ‘Care of the Self’ and ‘Aesthetics of Existence’
Daniel Smith 135-150

State Racism and the Paradox of Biopower
Elisa Fiaccadori 151-171

Political Technique, the Conflict of Umori, and Foucault’s Reading of Machiavelli in Sécurité, Territoire, Population
Sean Erwin 172-190

Alea Capta Est: Foucault’s Dispositif and Capturing Chance
Nick Hardy 191-216

Translations

Standing Vigil for the Day to Come
Elise Woodard, Robert Harvey 217-223

Reviews

Barry Stocker's avatarStockerblog

Serialising a paper I wrote a while back that has ideas on Foucault I am still working on, but which is going to be absorbed into different parts of that work, so I’d like to put it here as a way of setting up some part of  what I think is important in Foucault

Foucault’s approach to antique ethics is often seen as advocating a style of living, in which the individual engages in self-invention unrestrained by inner nature or external reality.  However, Foucault’s references to style of living have an ontology in the sense that individual living, and self creation, is discussed in the context of physical nature and social relations.   Individual pleasure is only well formed where it is also care of the self, a care of the self that refers to the nature of the body, and to relations with others.  Foucault refers to an active…

View original post 880 more words

Disney, T.
Complex spaces of orphan care – a Russian therapeutic children’s community
(2015) Children’s Geographies, 13 (1), pp. 30-43.

DOI: 10.1080/14733285.2013.827874

Abstract

Institutions of orphan care are immensely complex spaces imbued with social and cultural norms, and can exhibit intricate power relations and particularly severe examples of surveillance. While there have been numerous excellent quantitative studies of these institutions, they reveal little of the complexity and heterogeneity of the spaces, and there remains a need for more qualitative and particularly ethnographic studies of spaces of orphan care to reveal their nuances. Drawing upon the author’s reflections on a highly unusual space of orphan care, this article makes two major contributions to Children’s Geographies: (1) it employs a sorely neglected aspect of Foucault’s work in Children’s Geographies, Mettray, in analysing surveillance and discipline in an institution providing care to orphaned children and (2) It highlights the heterogeneity of these spaces and provides an example of best practice in spaces of orphan care.

Author Keywords
care; Children’s Geographies; Foucault; Mettray; orphan; Russia

Carey, J.L.W.
Taking Responsibility for Cloning: Discourses of Care and Knowledge in Biotechnological Approaches to Nonhuman Life
(2015) Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics, 11 p. Article in Press.

DOI: 10.1007/s10806-015-9544-0

Abstract
This article examines the practice of animal cloning in relation to discourses of care and responsibility, in particular a common cultural interpretation of care theorized by Michel Foucault. This interpretation figures care as a “pastoral” relation premised in essential differences between carers and objects of care, and its interspecies implications are increasingly drawing the attention of theorists in animal studies. This article argues that, perhaps despite appearances, animal welfare in the form of pastoral care and abstract conceptualizations of animals that are dominant in discourses of animal biotechnology are not mutually exclusive, but rather in practice may be operating in conjunction with each other, discursively working together to naturalize ethics of biotechnology and animal welfare that reinforce rather than question human dominance and superiority. Specifically, mapping the normative framework of pastoral care onto the existing scientific orientation to acquiring knowledge of animal bodies produces a definition of care that is presumed to be both finite and perfectible. Ultimately, critical analysis of biotechnological manifestations of care and responsibility enables both a theorization of the industry’s performance of responsibility independently of its care-related claims about its own practices, and the elucidation of an alternative framework for assessing interspecies ethics that maintains a critical distance from the supposed “naturalness” or “unnaturalness” of interspecies relationships such as cloning. © 2015 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht

Author Keywords
Animal ethics; Biopolitics; Biotechnology; Cloning; Ethics of care; Foucault