Foucault News

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

Dianna Taylor, Countering Modernity: Foucault and Arendt on Race and Racism, Telos, 154 (Spring 2011): 119-140
https://dx.doi.org/10.3817/0311154119

Analysis of a possible intellectual affinity between philosopher Michel Foucault and political theorist Hannah Arendt is valuable in its own right, given the insight it offers into the work of these two important thinkers. At the same time, certain aspects of such an affinity are especially important because of what they illustrate about the unique ways in which harm manifests itself within the context of modern societies, and about how the terrain of modernity might be negotiated such that harm is minimized and the practice of freedom is promoted. Of particular interest in this regard is the attitude toward modernity…

Thanks to Stuart at Progressive Geographies for this information

History of the Present is a journal devoted to history as a critical endeavor. Its aim is twofold: to create a space in which scholars can reflect on the role history plays in establishing categories of contemporary debate by making them appear inevitable, natural or culturally necessary; and to publish work that calls into question certainties about the relationship between past and present that are taken for granted by the majority of practicing historians. Its editors want to encourage the critical examination of both history’s influence on politics and the politics of the discipline of history itself. The journal’s object is to showcase articles that exemplify the practice of what might be called theorized empirical history. It is in the actual writing of history, based on mainly on archival evidence, that our contributors will offer readers an alternative to approaches that predominate in existing journals. A good number of established and new scholars in the United States and abroad are doing exciting and important archivally based historical writing of this sort. No history journal currently published, however, has devoted itself specifically to fostering this work and providing a dedicated forum for it.

The journal’s aim is to provide an intellectual space for historical scholarship that is explicitly political, but not in the usual sense of that word. The point is to link the present to the past not as its inevitable outcome, but as the contingent product of changes in relationships of power and in the ideas through which such relationships are conceived. We are less interested in articles that concentrate on the affairs of governments or politicians than in those that analyze the operations of power. We will seek work that approaches power not from a position of simple moralism, not as a denunciation of past injustices or an exposure of the ways the powerful have oppressed or victimized their “others.” Nor will we look for work that seeks to right the balance of past mistreatment, showing, for example, that those thought to be without power–women or homosexuals or colonial subjects or workers– indeed had “agency.” Rather, we will look for articles that analyze power relationships in their complexity: how are they established and justified? How has history been used to legitimize or challenge them? So, for example, rather than publishing a piece making the familiar argument that a “clash of civilizations” of long standing is at the heart of politics in the Middle East, we would invite contributors to ask how that idea is used to reduce the complexities –economic, social, religious, political, international–that structure the conflicts and so make sharp partisan divisions possible.

Our belief is that the categories that historians use in a common sense way often contribute to the solidification of relationships of power. By founding a journal dedicated to work that examines these categories, by providing a new space in which their history becomes visible, we expect to open a lively conversation among our contributors and readers about what is–and has been–at stake in their different and varied usages. So, by writing about “women” and “men,” not as known biological beings who have different “experiences” in time, but as themselves historical categories (even the biology is differently conceived), the articles we publish will offer a better understanding of how difference (in this case sexual difference) is differently constructed. Or, to take other examples that some of us work on, the concepts of fever, stranger, bureaucracy, incest, race, citizen, nationalism, the secular, and the universal can all be treated historically. When they are, new insight emerges into the changing meanings and uses of these concepts, and into how, in different contexts and at different historical moments, they serve different kinds of political ends. This in turn provides new perspectives on how we think about and practice politics. In this way, the history of the present opens the way to differently imagining the future.

A journal that takes this approach inevitably challenges the discipline of history’s standards for what constitutes experience and evidence, as well as what counts as acceptable analytic frames (progress, dialectical change, determinations of the present by the past). We are particularly interested in publishing work that pushes these traditional boundaries of acceptability. In this sense, History of the Present will provide a space similar to that offered by differences, Critical Inquiry, Representations and Public Culture, but with a disciplinary focus on history. (These journals sometimes do publish the kind of articles we have in mind, but not systematically, not with history as their focus.) Ours is a journal of historical practice, publishing authors who write innovative and exciting critically theorized history. We think that a highly visible journal of rigorously theorized history that cuts against the grain of established disciplinary norms will contribute both to history and theory. In this, we are inspired in part by a French journal published between 1975 and 1985, Les Révoltes Logiques. Its object was to marry philosophy and history through archival work that disrupted “the false testimony of linear history” and challenged contemporary certainties and prevailing political categories of analysis. Although inspired by Les Révoltes Logiques, History of the Present is not an attempt to resurrect that journal. Instead, it speaks to a need we are acutely aware of among ourselves and our colleagues: to provide a critical space for historians and other scholars who think theoretically about and through the past.

We take seriously the influence of poststructuralism, but History of the Present is not a poststructuralist or postmodern journal. It is not meant to push a particular theoretical line. Articles will, of course, be informed by Derridean or Foucauldian or psychoanalytic or Marxist theory, but only as any of those theories contribute to the writing of history as critique. To this end, the journal will not specify the geographical areas or social groups or the chronological boundaries worthy of representation in its pages; it will not make hasty judgments about the value of different historical approaches. Moreover, the journal will be interdisciplinary, provided the approach of the articles is historical. We will welcome all sorts of history–social, cultural, economic, political, intellectual, etc, if it is explicitly theorized. To the extent that what matters in the contemporary world is often secured through reference to the past, we agree with Foucault that history is a potentially productive space for fostering critical thinking. As he put it, “The game is to try to detect those things which have not yet been talked about, those things that, at the present time, introduce, show, give some more or less vague indications of the fragility of our system of thought, in our way of reflecting, in our practices.”

Strausz, Erzsebet. “Foucault, Critique and Security/Studies” Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Studies Association Annual Conference “Global Governance: Political Authority in Transition”, Le Centre Sheraton Montreal Hotel, MONTREAL, QUEBEC, CANADA, Mar 16, 2011 . 2011-01-25

Abstract:
This paper investigates the implications of a Foucauldian perspective for interrogating both practices of security and the (academic) ways of addressing them. Foucault described critique as a particular limit-attitude that marks out the position of the critiquing subject/self on the border of her historical conditioning in the present and calls for reflection on the characteristics of this particular conditioning. This juncture permits questioning actual practices as well as the ways in which the self/subject relates to them in the contemporary episteme. In this context theory and the ways of studying a particular segment of this reality appear as practices which feed into the economy of these epistemic relations. Concepts, rhetorical patterns and narrative images in academic thinking engaging with ‘security’ create particular power-effects across the discursive and non-discursive planes, i.e. by channelling political imagination in different ways or offering particular forms of knowledge for policy-making and political action. This understanding envisions critique in security studies as a way of reflecting on and problematizing the relations created and sustained by discursive and non-discursive practices of ‘security’. Drawing on examples from the ‘human security’ discourse and pushing them to their ‘limits’ the paper seeks to make a case for a Foucauldian approach.

Politics Beyond the Biopolitical Subject
A Symposium

Brisbane, Australia, December 8-9, 2011

Hosted by Griffith University
Funded by the Finnish Academy

The theory of biopolitics has, in the years since Michel Foucault first deployed the concept, taken a decidedly affirmative turn. No longer is biopolitics theorized simply to expose the violence done to human beings in order to develop and secure the welfare of the species. Numerous theorists of biopolitics now claim, in different ways, to have discovered in ‘life itself’ the basis on which to build a subject capable of resisting biopolitical regimes of violence and security. The biophilosophical traditions of thought which have developed in Foucault’s wake have sought to invest in the biological life of the subject as the very foundation on which to build a politics of resistance to biopolitical modes of power. An ‘affirmative biopolitics’ in popular parlance.

Can life itself function as an ontological foundation for a political subjectivity of resistance to biopolitical regimes? How can the biological life of the subject be a sufficient condition on which to base a politics of contestation to such regimes when it is the first presupposition of liberalism, the tradition of thought and governance to which these regimes owe their origin? Can life itself be conceived as the foundation for a post-liberal theory of subjectivity, given its fundamentality for liberal biopolitics and its biologized subject? What alternative ways of theorizing life are available to us? Is it possible to articulate a concept of the political that attunes us to our vital capacities rather than our finite vulnerabilities? Can we remake the world or must we only strive to survive in it?

Sharing in the assumption that the political is a fundamentally affirmative category, this symposium goes in search of the forms of becoming that the political subject is capable of when freed from stultifying accounts of its being which revolve around the fears of what can be done to its biological life. The reduction, in other words, of political subjectivity to biopolitical subjectivity. The future of the political subject will not depend on its life as such, but on the deeds and bonds of which it is capable, some of which will compromise its mere life, and the very livability of its subjectivity. Our gambit is that political subjects do not merely live in order to fit in with and adapt to their existing conditions, or desire the sustainability of the conditions for their living the lives they do. In contrast they resist those conditions, and where successful, overcome them, transforming them into that which they were not, in the process establishing new conditions by which to live differently. Thus our task is to affirm the other side to the subject which entails not its experience of openness to injury but the ways by which it decides what it wants, asserts what it possesses, and celebrates what it is able to do, in accordance with truths which transcend its existence as a merely living entity.

We invite papers that address this thematic from across the disciplines.

Send your abstracts (200-300 words) to Gideon Baker (g.baker@griffith.edu.au)
and Julian Reid (julian.reid@ulapland.fi) by May 31, 2011.

FOUCAULT ET LA RENAISSANCE

COLLOQUE INTERNATIONAL

Toulouse, 7, 8, 9 mars 2012
Colloque organisé par le laboratoire PLH de l’Université de Toulouse-Le Mirail et l’Institut Universitaire de France, avec la collaboration du CERPHI et de l’UMR5037 (Lyon)

Le présent colloque vise, dans une optique naturellement pluridisciplinaire, à convier littéraires, philosophes, historiens à penser le rapport de Michel Foucault à la Renaissance lequel, si l’on excepte des travaux épars (des articles de Tristan Dagron ou Ian Maclean, ou encore un ouvrage de Stephan Otto) n’a guère retenu l’attention des spécialistes jusqu’à présent.

Cette discrétion s’explique par la relative rareté des textes du philosophe sur la période, mis à part le chapitre « Stultifera navis » de l’Histoire de la folie à l’âge classique, le célèbre chapitre II des Mots et des choses « La prose du monde », ou encore les développements autour de la « gouvernementalité » consacrés à Machiavel et la raison d’état dans le cours du collège de France Sécurité, territoire, population. Un premier axe de réflexion pourra cependant s’appuyer sur cette part émergée pour envisager, dans une perspective certainement critique, le rapport de Foucault aux auteurs qu’il cite, mais également aux domaines de savoir qu’il convoque, à la question de la folie, de l’homme, voire à ce qu’il élabore comme étant l’épistémè du temps.

La dernière piste ouvre un second espace de réflexion, qui consiste à interroger la conception de l’histoire et de l’historiographie foucaldienne, axée sur la rupture, la discontinuité et la dispersion, pour la situer en particulier par rapport aux historiens néo-kantiens de la Renaissance comme Cassirer. On pourra voir les limites de ce modèle, mais aussi en sonder la fécondité actuelle dans les travaux des spécialistes de l’histoire des idées et des formes au XVIe siècle.

Dans le prolongement enfin, on pourra proposer aux participants de définir ce que leur propre travail doit à l’œuvre de Foucault, ou d’en mettre en œuvre la dynamique et la productivité. La perspective invite aussi bien à réinvestir les écrits existant qu’à scruter les allusions ou les silences (lesquels seraient du reste à interroger), ou même à s’emparer d’ouvrages de Foucault qui ne traitent pas directement de la Renaissance pour voir ce qu’ils sont néanmoins susceptibles d’apporter à une enquête sur la période. Pour prendre un exemple simple, et à l’invitation de l’auteur lui-même, on a pu réfléchir ces dernières années aux avatars des « techniques de soi » dans la culture et la littérature humanistes.

Comité scientifique :

Tristan Dagron, CNRS ENS de Lyon

Laurent Gerbier, Université de Tours-CESR

Olivier Guerrier, Université de Toulouse-Le Mirail

Didier Ottaviani, ENS de Lyon

Gary Gutting, Thinking the Impossible: French Philosophy Since 1960, The Oxford History of Philosophy, 978-0-19-922703-7 | Hardback | 10 March 2011

Review in The Guardian

Description
The late 20th century saw a remarkable flourishing of philosophy in France. The work of French philosophers is wide ranging, historically informed, often reaching out beyond the boundaries of philosophy; they are public intellectuals, taken seriously as contributors to debates outside the academy. Gary Gutting tells the story of the development of a distinctively French philosophy in the last four decades of the 20th century. His aim is to arrive at an account of what it was to ‘do philosophy’ in France, what this sort of philosophizing was able to achieve, and how it differs from the analytic philosophy dominant in Anglophone countries.

His initial focus is on the three most important philosophers who came to prominence in the 1960s: Michel Foucault, Gilles Deleuze, and Jacques Derrida. He sets out the educational and cultural context of their work, as a basis for a detailed treatment of how they formulated and began to carry out their philosophical projects in the 1960s and 1970s. He gives a fresh assessment of their responses to the key influences of Hegel and Heidegger, and the fraught relationship of the new generation to their father-figure Sartre. He concludes that Foucault, Derrida, and Deleuze can all be seen as developing their fundamental philosophical stances out of distinctive readings of Nietzsche. The second part of the book considers topics and philosophers that became prominent in the 1980s and 1990s, such as the revival of ethics in Levinas, Derrida, and Foucault, the return to phenomenology and its use to revive religious experience as a philosophical topic, and Alain Badiou’s new ontology of the event. Finally Gutting brings to the fore the meta-philosophical theme of the book, that French philosophy since the 1960s has been primarily concerned with thinking the impossible.

« Une histoire au présent : Les historiens et Michel Foucault aujourd’hui »

30, 31 mai – 1er juin 2011

Aix-en-Provence Maison Méditerranéenne des Sciences de l’Homme
salle Georges Duby

Colloque organisé par Damien BOQUET, Blaise DUFAL et Pauline LABEY
Institut Universitaire de France CNRS – Université d’Aix-Marseille I UMR TELEMME EHESS – Centre de Recherche Historique

Lundi 30 mai 2011

9h – 12h30 Séance présidée par Damien BOQUET (Université d’Aix-Marseille I / IUF)

9h30-9h45 : accueil des participants

9h45-10h15 : Pauline LABEY (E.H.E.S.S.) : Introduction : « Une histoire au présent ? »

10h15-11h : Jean François BERT (E.H.E.S.S.) : « Les raisons du malentendu. L’Histoire de la folie à l’âge classique : histoire et/ou psychologie »

11h-11h30 : PAUSE

11h30-12h15 : Thomas GOLSENNE (École des Beaux-Arts de Nice) : « Foucault et l’iconologie : le malentendu »

14h00 – 18h00 Séance présidée par Didier ERIBON (Université d’Amiens)

14h-14h45 : Kim Sang ONG VAN CUNG (Université de Poitiers) : « La place des œuvres dans l’ontologie historique de nous-mêmes. Tragédie, philosophie et histoire de la démocratie athénienne dans Le Gouvernement de soi et des autres »

14h45-15h30 : Déborah Cohen (Université d’Aix-Marseille I) : « Esthétique de l’existence et gouvernement des autres : la Révolution française (1789-1794) au prisme du cours de 1984. »

15h30-16h : PAUSE

16h-16h45 : Emmanuel COCCIA (Université de Fribourg) : « L’ordre du pouvoir. Foucault et la question hiérarchique »

16h45-17h30 : Sophie WAHNICH (E.H.E.S.S.) : « La lutte des races comme savoir archéologique pour l’aujourd’hui »

Mardi 31 mai 2011

9h-12h30

Séance présidée par Deborah COHEN (Université d’Aix-Marseille I)

9h-9h45 : Sandra Boehringer (Université de Strasbourg) : « Des sociétés d’avant la norme, des sociétés d’avant la sexualité : étudier l’Antiquité après Foucault »

9h45-10h30 : Damien BOQUET (Université d’Aix-Marseille I / IUF) : « L’amitié comme problème au Moyen Âge »

10h30-11h : PAUSE

11h-11h45 : Julien DUBOULOZ (Université d’Aix-Marseille I) : « Le pouvoir de vie et de mort sur le fils : penser la paternité dans la cité à Rome »

11h45-12h30 : Laurence Guignard (Université de Nancy II) : « La pratique des discours de vérité : justice et psychiatrie au XIXe siècle »

14h00-18h00

Séance présidée par Sophie WAHNICH (E.H.E.S.S.) 14h15-15h : Philippe CHEVALLIER (B.N.F.) : « Que veut dire faire une histoire des problématisations »

15h-15h45 : Olivier BOULNOIS (E.P.H.E.) : « Destruction et analyse. Lire la philosophie médiévale après Foucault

15h45-16h : PAUSE

16h-16h45 : Anne-Valérie DULAC (Université de Paris III) : « Gérard Simon, l’archéologie et l’histoire de l’optique pré-moderne »

16h45-17h30 : Marcela IACUB (C.N.R.S.) : « Du péril des fictions dans les sociétés démocratiques »

Mercredi 1er juin 2011

9h-12h30

Séance présidée par Jacques CHIFFOLEAU (E.H.E.S.S.)

9h-9h45 : Luca PALTRINIERI (E.N.S.-Lyon) : « L’histoire de la philosophie saisie par son dehors »

9h45-10h30 : Blaise DUFAL (E.H.E.S.S.) : « Les deux corps de l’intellectuel : pratiques de l’imaginaire »

10h30-11h : PAUSE

11h-11h45 : Paolo NAPOLI (E.H.E.S.S.) : « De Boulainvilliers à Kant: penser l’historicité de l’universel »

11h45-12h30 : Geoffroy de LAGASNERIE (Université de Paris I) : « L’hypothèse libérale »

14h00-17h00 Séance présidée par Blaise DUFAL (E.H.E.S.S.)

14h15-15h : Julien THERY (Université de Montpellier III) : « Foucault, l’enquête, la vérité et le droit : pour l’histoire des premières formes de gouvernement centralisé en Occident »

15h-15h45 : Julie CLAUSTRE (Université de Paris I) : « Ecrire l’histoire des prisons médiévales avec Michel Foucault »

15h45-16h : PAUSE

16h-16h45 : Didier ERIBON (Université d’Amiens) : « Politiques de l’histoire »

The IVR XXV WORLD CONGRESS OF PHILOSOPHY OF LAW AND SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY will take place at Goethe-Universität in Frankfurt, Germany, from August 15th to 20th 2011.

All the papers effectively presented in this special workshop will be translated into Portuguese, with the permission of the author, and published as a book in Brazil, possibily a bilingual edition.

August 18th 2011
SPECIAL WORKSHOP ON BIOPOLITICS
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS AND PAPERS

Michel Foucault summarizes his understanding of the term Biopolitics in the abstract of his 1978-1979 Course at College de France: it is understood as the way it was tried, since the XVIII century, to rationalize the problems faced by governmental practices by means of phenomena concerning a group of living beings taken as a population: health, hygiene, birth rates, races… In his 1975-1976 course he defines it as the movement by which power takes charge of life concerns. Gilles Deleuze spoke of the idea of managing a multiplicity of beings (a given population) over a vast and open space, where probabilistics become increasingly relevant. Giorgio Agamben states that the totalitarianism of our century is founded on the dynamical identity of life and politics.

This special workshop is intended to gather members and scholars who consider the idea of Biopolitics as understood by the authors above mentioned – as well as by other contemporary philosophers – useful for a better comprehension of XX and XXI century national and international politics. There is a special interest in discussions towards the ways Biopolitics can be related to the role of Social Philosophy and Philosophy of Law in the present world.

Papers relating the concept of Biopolitcs or the works of the above authors to other philosophical traditions are also welcome.

Abstracts up to 500 words should be sent by email until April 31st 2011 to one of the coordinators indicated below.

Full papers, until June 30th 2011, designed for a 20 minutes presentation, including 5 minutes for discussion. More time will be allowed if possible.

Abstracts and papers should be written and presented in English.

All selected participants should register for the Congress.
Further information can be obtained at the Congress website
For a list of other groups and workshops to be held in the Congress, please refer to the same website.

Special Workshop Coordinators

Prof. Lucas de Alvarenga Gontijo
Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Minas Gerais – Brazil
alvarengagontijo@gmail.com

Prof. Luís Antônio Cunha Ribeiro
Universidade Federal Fluminense – Brazil
advogados@superig.com.br

Bracken, Pat, and Philip Thomas. “From Szasz to Foucault: On the Role of Critical Psychiatry.” Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology 17, no. 3 (2010): 219-228. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/405314

Abstract
Because psychiatry deals specifically with ‘mental’ suffering, its efforts are always centrally involved with the meaningful world of human reality. As such, it sits at the interface of a number of discourses: genetics and neuroscience, psychology and sociology, anthropology, philosophy, and the humanities. Each of these provides frameworks, concepts, and examples that seek to assist our attempts to understand mental distress and how it might be helped. However, these discourses work with different assumptions, methodologies, values, and priorities. Some are in dispute with one another. At various times in the history of psychiatry, a particular form of understanding has become dominant and worked to marginalize .

Niesche, R. (2011). Foucault and Educational Leadership: Disciplining the Principal. London: Routledge.

Link to publisher’s site

Description
This book draws on a number of Foucault’s concepts to explore how school principals are created as subjects through their work practices and various educational leadership discourses. Foucault’s work is useful for provoking new thought into how the principalship is lived and disciplined in ways that produce both contradictions and tensions for schools principals. Rather than using overarching theories and models of leadership, this book uses Foucault’s notions of disciplinary power, governmentality and ethics to provide an alternative look at educational leadership through two in depth case studies. The book provides an example of putting Foucault’s concepts to work in a field that is still largely dominated by traditional, best practice approaches to educational leadership.