Foucault News

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

HF-lorenzini
Un demi-siècle d’Histoire de la folie, sous la direction de Daniele Lorenzini et Arianna Sforzini, Editions Kimé, 2013.

L’Histoire de la folie à l’âge classique de Michel Foucault a produit, au moment de sa publication, une onde de choc. Cet ouvrage, foisonnant, baroque, labyrinthique, est apparu aussitôt comme insituable. S’agissait-il d’histoire, de philosophie, de littérature, de sociologie ? Les partages disciplinaires traditionnels furent emportés par le courant impétueux de ce livre impossible. Mais il n’y eut pas que les cercles universitaires pour se trouver inquiétés par ces thèses tumultueuses (l’exclusion de la folie par l’âge classique, l’hypocrisie atroce de la libération des fous par les médecins modernes, etc.). Le récit épique de l’enfermement des fous dans les prisons de l’ordre moral, des nouveaux partages imposés par les révolutionnaires, altérait la bonne conscience d’une psychiatrie qui se pensait, fondamentalement, et par la vertu d’une fondation originaire jamais interrogée, humaniste. Histoire de la folie préparait ainsi les révoltes de l’anti-psychiatrie.

Cinquante ans après la parution de ce qui, au départ, était une simple thèse de doctorat, l’éclat de la rupture est intact. Ce livre continue à troubler, fasciner, irriter. Notre culture ne l’a toujours pas digéré. On découvre sans cesse de nouvelles apories, de nouveaux problèmes, de nouvelles perspectives pour interroger l’avenir. Ces rencontres, provoquées à l’occasion de cet « anniversaire », ne sont pas des commémorations. Il ne s’agit pas d’établir scientifiquement ici ce que Foucault a vraiment voulu dire, mais d’entendre jusqu’à quel point, encore aujourd’hui, ce texte réinvente notre rapport à la folie.

Daniele Lorenzini finit l’écriture d’une thèse sur le rapport entre éthique et politique chez Michel Foucault, Pierre Hadot et Stanley Cavell ; il a coédité les conférences de Foucault sur L’origine de l’herméneutique de soi (Vrin, 2013).

Arianna Sforzini prépare une thèse sur la présence et l’importance du théâtre dans l’œuvre de Foucault et finit l’écriture d’un livre intitulé <emFoucault et la pensée du corps (à paraître aux PUF, coll. « Philosophies »). Ils co-animent, tous les deux, avec Frédéric Gros et Ariane Revel, le séminaire « Actualités Foucault » à l’Université Paris-Est Créteil.

SOMMAIRE
Introduction. L’Histoire de la folie dans l’œuvre de Foucault
Daniele Lorenzini & Arianna Sforzini

PREMIERE PARTIE
Esthétiques de la déraison

Degré zéro de l’histoire de la folie et texte cartésien : l’archéologie de quel silence ?
Emmanuel Gripay

La présence du théâtre dans Histoire de la folie
Arianna Sforzini

La folie et la mort chez Foucault : éléments pour une pensée du dehors
Jérémy Romero

DEUXIÈME PARTIE
Origines du cogito

Événement et origine dans Histoire de la folie
Francesco Paolo Adorno

La naissance du cogito
Kojiro Fujita

TROISIÈME PARTIE
Folie, psychiatrie, histoire

La sorcière et la possédée : deux figures du désordre
Paul Mengal

L’affaire Firmin (1794-1799) et l’absence de législation sur le crime en « démence » : une voie politique pendant la Révolution française ?
Caroline Mangin-Lazarus

Michel Foucault, folie, psychiatrie
Roger Ferreri

APPENDICE

Foucault en Italie
Manlio Iofrida

Biobibliographies des auteurs
Index des noms

Ritu Birla, Maine (and Weber) Against the Grain: Towards a Postcolonial Genealogy of the Corporate Person (2013) Journal of Law and Society, 40 (1), pp. 92-114.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6478.2013.00614.x

Abstract
This essay forges ties between postcolonial methodologies and the economic sociology of law, emphasizing the history, legal production, and governmental habitus of that modern abstraction called ‘the economy’. It pursues three interrelated sites to do so: the categories of government and economy, via Weber and Foucault; classical legal discourse on corporate or group life and its temporizing from status to contract; and the relationship between the legal subject and homo economicus, investigated and telescoped through the figure of the corporate person. Empirically, focusing on India as a lens to highlight a colonial genealogy of neoliberal modernity, the analysis animates these themes via the history of colonial market governance, its relationship to the ’embedded’ practices of vernacular capitalism, and emergent forms of economic citizenship today, seen through Indian case law on the corporate person and corporate veil-piercing.

DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-6478.2013.00614.x

DisorderCover-HR1-180x260 John Masterson, The Disorder of Things: A Foucauldian Approach to the Work of Nuruddin Farah, Wits University Press, 2013

Nuruddin Farah is widely regarded as one of the most sophisticated voices in contemporary world literature. Michel Foucault is revered as one of the most important thinkers of the twentieth century, with his discursive legacy providing inspiration for scholars working in a range of interdisciplinary fields. The Disorder of Things offers a reading of the Somali novelist through the prism of the French philosopher. The book argues that the preoccupations that have remained central throughout Farah’s forty year career, including political autocracy, female infibulation, border conflicts, international aid and development, civil war, transnational migration and the Horn of Africa’s place in a so-called ‘axis of evil’, can be mapped onto some key concerns in Foucault’s writing most notably Foucault’s theoretical turn from ‘disciplinary’ to ‘biopolitical’ power.

In both the colonial past and the postcolonial present, Somalia is typically represented as an incubator of disorder: whether in relation to internecine conflict, international terrorism or contemporary piracy. Through his work, both fictional and non-fictional, Farah strives to present alternative stories to an expanding global readership. The Disorder of Things analyses the politics and poetics that underpin this literary project, beginning with Farah’s first fictional cycle, Variations on the Theme of an African Dictatorship (1979-1983), and ending with his Past Imperfect trilogy (2004-2011). Farah’s writing calls for a more refined, substantial reading of our current geo-political situation. As such, it both warrants and compels the kind of critical engagement foregrounded throughout The Disorder of Things.

This book will appeal to students, academics and general readers with an interest in the interdisciplinary study of literature. Its engagement with theorists, drawn from postcolonial, feminist and development studies, set against the backdrop of a host of philosophical and sociological discourses, shows how such intellectual cross-fertilisation can enliven a single-author study.

John Masterson is a lecturer in the Department of English at the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. He has published work on a range of writers, including Chinua Achebe, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Kiran Desai, Dave Eggers and Abdulrazak Gurnah, and on topics, including the Rwandan genocide and postcolonial conflict.

… an important addition to the study of the oeuvre of Nuruddin Farah, one of this continent’s leading and most original novelists. The study will be of great interest to scholars specialising in contemporary African literature […] whilst being accessible to general readers with an especial interest in Foucault; in African politics and social developments; or in assessing the contribution of an intriguing but ‘difficult’ author.
—Annie Gagiano, University of Stellenbosch

The author is ambitious; this is not a study which applies Foucault, but a study which at its best attempts to reread each figure (Foucault and Farah) in dialogue with the other.
—Eleni Coundouriotis, University of Connecticut

I’m posting this a bit late – but still an item worth knowing about. Posted on The Bartlett UCL site

15 August – 05 September 2013

Location: UCL North Lodge, Gower Street, WC1E 6BT

[Update 4 April 2026: Links updated – with some archived on the Wayback Machine]

Pantopticon: Experimental Tales of Jeremy Bentham

This free collaborative exhibition explores the life, influence and radical ideas of Jeremy Bentham. A display of facsimile manuscripts from UCL Special Collections is enhanced by projected images and text, weaving a different tale for each visitor. The “flexible” display methods will help us understand how exhibition designers and curators can use digital technology to explore multiple narratives from one set of artefacts.

This exhibition showcases two UCL-based research initiatives: Design with Heritage (in collaboration with the Victoria & Albert Museum) and Transcribe Bentham.

Design with Heritage is a twelve-month Creative Economy Knowledge Exchange Project supported by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC). It is run in collaboration between UCL Centre for Sustainable Heritage and the Victoria & Albert Museum. The aim of the project is to develop connections between designers, academic researchers, and arts and heritage institutions by identifying shared interests and creating opportunities for collaboration.

Transcribe Bentham is an award-winning participatory project based at University College London. Its aim is to engage the public in the online transcription of original and unstudied manuscript papers written by Jeremy Bentham, the great philosopher and reformer. To date, over 5500 Bentham manuscripts have been digitally transcribed by volunteers worldwide.

Download the exhibition poster as a PDF

With thanks to Dirk Felleman for this info

CALL FOR PAPERS
The fourteenth annual meeting of the Foucault Circle

University of Malmö
Malmö, Sweden

June 5-8, 2014

We seek submissions for:

1). Papers on any aspect of Foucault’s work, as well as studies, critiques, and applications of Foucauldian thinking;

2). Round table discussions comprised of four or five panelists:

  • European and North American perspectives on Foucault’s work;
  • Feminist perspectives on Foucault’s work;
  • Utilizing the Foucauldian “Toolbox”.

Individual paper submissions require an abstract of no more than 750 words; round table submissions require a 500 word abstract describing the overall theme and 150 word summaries of each panelist’s talking points. All submissions should be formatted as “.doc” attachments and sent via email to program committee chair Edward McGushin (emcgushin@stonehill.edu) on or before January 2, 2014. Indicate “Foucault Circle submission” in the subject heading. Program decisions will be announced by early February.

All abstracts should be prepared for anonymous review.

The meeting will begin Thursday afternoon with a round table discussion, followed by an informal welcome session and dinner. Morning and afternoon paper sessions will be held on Friday and Saturday; the Saturday sessions will be followed by a business meeting and dinner. The conference will conclude with paper sessions on Sunday morning. Presenters of individual papers will have approximately 35 minutes for paper presentation and discussion combined; papers should be a maximum of 3000 words (15-20 minutes, preferably 15). Round tables will have approximately 50 minutes total for presentation and discussion combined; individual panelists should plan to speak for no more than 5-7 minutes.

Logistical information about lodging, transportation, and other arrangements will be available after the program has been announced.

For more information about the Foucault Circle, please see our website

stuartelden's avatarProgressive Geographies

03_1971_03_p00008303_1971_03_p000084

This text was co-authored by Michel Foucault, Pierre Vidal-Nacquet and Jean-Marie Domenach, and was first read at a news conference on 8 February 1971. It was subsequently published in Esprit in March 1971. As far as I know, the only partial translations of this important document are found in the English edition of Didier Eribon’s biography, Michel Foucault, translated by Betsy Wing, London: Faber and Faber, 1992, pp. 224-5; and in David Macey, The Lives of Michel Foucault, London: Random House, 1993, p. 258.

These translations are very good, but both are incomplete, and there are some interesting and important elements within the text that are somewhat obscured. This manifesto was issued right in the middle of Foucault’s first course at the Collège de France, now translated as Lectures on the Will to Know. There are several important resonances in the language. The version below attempts to make these…

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The book was very much inspired by Foucault’s work, even if Stuart Elden takes issue with what Foucault says directly about territory. For an interview with Stuart Elden which provides an overview of the book see the Exploring Geopolitics site

stuartelden's avatarProgressive Geographies

BofTI’ve just received my advance copy of The Birth of Territory, and additional copies have been sent by the warehouse. The Chicago page for the book has the book listed as published, and orders from them direct will be sent now (there are also electronic copies available). I guess online bookstores will take a few more days to receive copies.

[Update 9th September: the Kindle edition is now available. Amazon have the physical copy down for release on 13th September]

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Colin Koopman, Genealogy as Critique: Foucault and the Problems of Modernity, Indiana University Press, 2013, 348pp., $30.00 (pbk), ISBN 9780253006219.
Reviewed by Amy Allen, Dartmouth College

In Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews: An electronic journal
29 August 2013

The overall aim of Colin Koopman’s Genealogy as Critique is “to explicate genealogy in such a way as to show that it offers a valuable, effective, and uniquely important practice of philosophical-historical critique of the present” (5). Michel Foucault’s genealogical method, which serves as Koopman’s paradigm case of genealogy, is enormously influential but often misunderstood by critics and fans alike. Koopman’s defense of genealogy rests on a two-step revision of our understanding of Foucault’s method: first, Koopman rethinks the relationship between Foucaultian genealogy and Kantian critique; second, he interprets Foucault’s practice of Kantian critique through the lens of problematization. Once we reinterpret Foucaultian genealogy along these lines, Koopman argues, we will be able to see that his work belongs in conversation with that of critical theorists such as Habermas and pragmatists such as Dewey and Rorty, rather than with the Continental high theorists — Derrida, Lacan, and Agamben — with whom he is more often associated. In the end, Koopman proposes an ambitious methodological reconciliation of Foucaultian genealogy with pragmatist critical theory in which the former fulfills the backward looking, diagnostic task of articulating our most pressing problems and the latter fulfills the forward looking, anticipatory task of suggesting possible responses to those problems.

The book divides into roughly three, not entirely equal, parts. After an introductory chapter that situates Koopman’s view within existing Foucault scholarship, the first four chapters explicate the method of genealogical problematization, understood as a transformative renewal of the Kantian notion of critique. The next two chapters re-read Foucault’s work in light of the account of his method offered in the first half of the book. The concluding chapter makes the case for the methodological reconciliation of Foucaultian genealogy as problematization and pragmatist critical theory. The book as a whole is guided by Koopman’s understanding of philosophy as a critical enterprise, “an immanent and reflexive engagement with the full complexity and contingency of the conditions of possibility for doing, being, and thinking in our cultural present” (23).

read more

Michel Foucault on Gaston Bachelard (video)

02 oct. 1972

Michel Foucault situe la pensée de Bachelard dans l’évolution des connaissances scientifiques des années 20.

Emission
Un certain regard
Office national de radiodiffusion télévision française

Julian Brigstocke, Artistic Parrhesia and the Genealogy of Ethics in Foucault and Benjamin (2013) Theory, Culture and Society, 30 (1), pp. 57-78.
https://doi.org/10.1177/0263276412450467

Abstract
In The Use of Pleasure, Michel Foucault suggests that it is possible to read Walter Benjamin’s writings on Baudelaire as a contribution to a genealogy of ethics. This article experiments with reading Benjamin in this way. It shows that a distinctive analysis of each of the four elements of Foucauldian ethics (ethical substance, mode of subjectivation, ethical practice and telos) can be found in Benjamin’s work on Baudelaire and the Paris arcades. Specifically, the article makes the case for reading Benjamin in terms of his valuable contribution to understandings of the role played by art in modern forms of ‘parrhesia’, or courageous truth-telling. However, whereas Foucault’s notion of ‘arts of living’ focuses on challenging actual relations of power, Benjamin’s focuses on activating potential forms of power. In this way, Benjamin’s ethical framework tests the limits of Foucault’s conceptualization of the government of self and others.

Author Keywords
aesthetics of existence; Baudelaire; Benjamin; cynics; Foucault; parrhesia; truth