Foucault News

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

Rossi, A.
Techniques of Finitude: On the Pastoral Matrix of Economic Care
(2023) Theory, Culture and Society

DOI: 10.1177/02632764231203567

Abstract

Building and expanding on Foucault’s work, this essay interprets pastoral power as a turning point within the long-term history of the care of the self. Through an analysis of early Christian monasticism, it claims that the pastorate emerged out of a re-conceptualization of ancient understandings of human finitude and a correlative transformation of the techniques revolving around it. Pastoral power instantiates a specific way of framing institutionally the subject’s opening to the limits. The argument thus suggests how, and to what extent, this matrix of government still determines, albeit under a different guise, the current political phase, especially in as far as economic governmentality and its call to the indefinite self-enhancement of subjectivity are concerned. © The Author(s) 2023.

Author Keywords

economic theology; finitude; Michel Foucault; pastoral power

Foucault Circle
May 23-26 2024
Tentative Program

PDF of program

The Foucault Circle will be held in the Judee Wales Watson Theatre (known as the Judee) downstairs in the Little Building, Emerson College, 80 Boylston St, Boston, MA 02116. The conference is free and open to the public. However, all attendees must be registered in advance with the conference organizers to access Emerson College’s facilities. Please email Sam Binkley at Samuel_binkley@emerson.edu to be added to the visitor’s roster.

Thursday May 23
5:00 – 7:00pm: Asceticism, Care, and Pastoral Power
Moderator: Sam Binkley

Will Tilleczek (McGill University)
From Normativity to Social Form: Foucault’s Sociology of Ethics

Karl Katz Lyden (Södertörn University)
A Politics of Immediacy

Anna Ahlgren (Stockholm University)
Pastoral Power through Children’s Literature: Re/presentations of the Subject at School Entry

7:30pm: Welcome Reception
Contact organizers for details

Friday May 24
8:30 – 10:30am Intellectuals and Critique
Moderator: Patrick Gamez

Daniel Schultz (Whitman College)
Foucault: Secular Critique or Critique of the Secular?

Kevin Thompson (DePaul University)
Lessons from the GIS (Health Information Group): Truth-Telling, Demedicalization, and the Government of Life

Daniel Wyche (Columbia University)
Foucault’s Lost Concepts: Intellectuals, Power, and Normativity

10:45 – 11:45am Memorial for Joanna Crosby
Erinn Gilson (Merrimack College)
Dianna Taylor (John Carroll University)
Lauren Guilmette (Elon University)

11:45- 1:15pm Lunch/Business Meeting

1:15 – 3:15pm Strategies of Power in National Context
Moderator: Ed McGushin

Christian Lundahl (Örebro University)
The Reproduction of Episteme in Swedish Education, 16th to 18th century

Rebecca Robinson (Hong Kong Baptist University)
The Birth of Biopolitics in early China

Shao-Jie Chen & Yi-Chieh Lee (National Chengchi University)
The Government of homo salus: A Brief Genealogical

3:30 – 5:00pm Round Table: Histories and Futures of the Foucault Circle in conjunction with the World Congress: Foucault, 40 years After. In Memory of Tom Flynn (1936-2024)
Jana Sawicki (Williams College)
James Bernauer, SJ (Boston College)
Devonya Havis (University of Buffalo)
Dianna Taylor (John Carroll University)
Edward McGushin (Stonehill College
Kevin Thompson (DePaul University)
Dianna Taylor (John Carroll University)

6:00pm Dinner
Contact organizers for details

Saturday May 25

8:30-10:30am Emotions, Affect, Friendship
Moderator: Sam Binkley

Nicolas Arenas (London School of Economics and Political Science)
Unveiling marketing governmentality: epistemological and theoretical considerations for analyzing the instrumentalization of emotions in marketing practices

Lorenzo Petrarchi (Università di Bergamo)
The Foucauldian project of a “History of Friendship”

Kai Moore (Graduate Theological Union)
Fleshing Out “Bodies and Pleasures”: Affect, Morality, and Power in Resistance

10:45am-12:45pm Sexual Violence, Power and Discourse
Moderator: Lauren Guilmette

Miranda Young (New School for Social research)
Legibility and Intelligibility: The Discourse of Survivor Storytelling

Aurora Laybourn-Candlish (DePaul University)
The Administrative Grotesque and “The Second Rape”: A Foucauldian Critique of Carceral Approaches to Sexual Violence

Vilde Aavistland (University of Louisville)
A Punch in the Face: Foucault, Rape, and Sexual Violability

12:45 – 1:45pm Lunch

1:45 – 3:45pm The Archive in the Anthropocene
Moderator: Patrick Gamez

Almira Mert (DePaul University)
Philosophy and History of Philosophy in Foucault’s Le discours philosophique

Randall Johnson (Independent scholar)
Foucault’s Discourse on Discourse: Maintaining a tenuous grasp on an elusive now

Michael Eng (Appalachian State University)
The Names of the Archive: Writing between “Life Itself” and la vie la mort in Huffer, Foucault, and Derrida

4:00-5:30pm Book Panel: Foucault in Brazil: Dictatorship, Resistance, Solidarity by Marcelo Hoffman
Moderator: Ed McGushin
Corey McCall (Independent scholar)
Lynne Huffer (Emory University)
Response by Marcelo Hoffman (Pace University)

Sunday May 26
8:30-10:30am Workshop Discussion: The Lives of Infamous Men
Lynne Huffer (Emory University)
Fay Alafouzou (Emory University)
Taryn Jordan (Colgate University)
Haylee Harrell (University of Houston)
Ege Selin Islekel (Texas A&M)
Lauren Guilmette (Elon University)

10:45am-12:45pm Literature and Readership
Moderator: Lauren Guilmette
Samuel Talcott (Saint Joseph’s University) The Archive and the Act of Reading: Foucault on Flaubert and Modern Literature

Leonhard Riep (Goethe University Frankfurt)
The Gesture Toward the Abyss: Limit-Experience, Politics, and the Ontology of Language

Liubov Bogodelnikova (Irkutsk National Research Technical University)
What is a Reader? The Ethics of Reading in Foucault

Mahadevan, J.
What connects positivism and interpretivism in cross-cultural management studies: Genealogy as a method for re-ordering disciplinary knowledge
(2023) International Journal of Cross Cultural Management

DOI: 10.1177/14705958231223874

Abstract
Cross-cultural management (CCM) studies is the discipline that investigates the interrelations between culture, management and organization, and ensuing implications. Like all disciplines, it is built upon certain presumed ‘disciplinary truths’, such as paradigmatic delineations, and assumptions of how culture should be studied differently within different paradigms. Such presumed truths easily become ‘trends’, potentially even disciplinary closures. In this article, I show how the concept of genealogy (Foucault), can help challenge prevalent ideas of how the disciplinary knowledge of CCM studies is ordered, in particular the idea that positivism and interpretivism are opposing CCM paradigms which study culture in distinct ways. It then becomes apparent how positivism and interpretivism, as selectively understood and delineated by CCM studies, are characterized by a shared focus on stable and immaterial selected aspects of culture and, consequently, suffer from the same limitations. Genealogy thus ‘un-fixes’ disciplinary knowledge and, via widening the scope of the analysis, enables CCM scholars to make choices beyond presently taken-for-granted disciplinary delineations. © The Author(s) 2023.

Author Keywords

closure; culture; disciplinary knowledge; foucault; geertz; genealogy; hofstede; interpretivism; paradigm; positivism

Fazilleau, K.
L’Indien atemporel d’Edward S. Curtis et le mythe de la race en voie de disparition
(2023) Etudes Anglaises, 76 (2), pp. 157-179.

DOI: 10.3917/etan.762.0157

Abstract

This article aims at highlighting the dynamic link between the photographs of Native Americans taken by Edward S. Curtis between 1898 and 1927, published in his work The North American Indian, and the colonial discourse about the figure of the Indian, particularly the myth of the “Vanishing Indian.”Indeed, Curtis’s primary objective was to “preserve”the culture of an “Indian”whom he considered to be “authentic,””primitive,”and “intact,”which is to say spared from the effects of colonization and Americanization. In this manner, he hoped to portray an Indian from the past, a product of colonial imagery. The study conducted in this article borrows from Michel Foucault’s concept of networks of knowledge and power, to examine how Curtis’s undertaking was fed by colonial discourse and then in turn fed it, thus popularizing the myth of the “Vanishing Indian.”At the intersection between colonial studies and photographic studies, we will see how Curtis’s photographs are plagued with inherent contradictions, similarly to the discourse on the colonized Other. © Klincksieck.

CALL FOR ABSTRACTS:
Echoes of Foucault, forty years after

The Foucault Circle NL/BE is organizing a conference about interdisciplinary uses of Foucault’s work, with a focus on themes which Foucault did not think much about himself, but we do: decolonization, gender, climate change, etc.

University of Amsterdam: Amsterdam Roeterseilandcampus
25-06-2024

Few philosophers have been such prolific thinkers as Michel Foucault. His general theme of practices concerning ‘the subject’ led him to explore a wide range of different topics. His investigation into the subject took him from analyses of the human sciences, to dividing practices that categorize subjects as normal or abnormal, and eventually to the modes in which we change ourselves into subjects. Foucault’s work always supported emancipation of marginalized groups. Yet, many commentators have argued that, despite his prolificity, Foucault has left some surprising lacunae in his analyses. For example, in his work, he appears to have had little attention for feminist movements, decolonization, and climate change. The Echoes of Foucault conference aims to critically celebrate Foucault’s thought forty years after his death, by focusing on these lacunae. How is his work helpful for researchers today, across different disciplines? We will ask whether and how it might be possible to think with Foucault about these kinds of topics. With a wink, we say: Woke Foucault!

We invite young scholars to apply, by sending an abstract (400 words) to foucaultcirclenlbe@gmail.com by May 1st 2024. We welcome both work-in-progress, as well as more finished papers. The topics should be fit for a 20 minute presentation. We especially encourage students and (junior) scholars from underrepresented backgrounds to apply.

More information to be announced.

On behalf of the équipe Foucault Circle NL/BE:
Steven Dorrestijn / Michiel Leezenberg / Guilel Treiber / Liza Steultjens / Berend van Wijk / Casper Verstegen

Jardim, Fabiana Augusta Alves, López-Ruiz, Osvaldo, & Méndez, Pablo. (2024). Governamentalidades latino-americanas: tramas entre colonialidade e neoliberalismo. . Universidade de São Paulo. Faculdade de Educação.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.11606/9786587047669

Open access

Includes interview with Colin Gordon
Governamentalidade e além: entrevista com Colin Gordon
Colin Gordon, William Walters, Martina Tazzioli

Sinopse
A presente coletânea inaugura a Coleção Desbordar e reúne pesquisadores latino-americanos dos campos da Sociologia, da Antropologia, da Psicologia Social e do Direito para interrogar os entrelaçamentos entre a história da colonização no continente, a formação dos Estados nacionais e as formas sociais (re)constituídas a partir e em consonância com agenda neoliberal desde os anos 1970 – tomando o golpe militar no Chile como evento inaugural. O livro está dividido em três seções: 1) Neoliberalismos e governamentalidade; 2) Neoliberalismos e trabalho e 3) Neoliberalismos e espacialidades. Na primeira parte, que se abre com a tradução de uma entrevista com Colin Gordon e sua provocação com relação aos limites da governamentalidade como arranjo capaz de interligar Estado, Lei e o horizonte de uma sociedade pacificada e com algum grau de coesão, os capítulos exploram, a partir de diferentes recortes, os laços entre Estado, burocracia, racionalidades de governo mergulhadas na colonialidade e encarnações dos neoliberalismos no continente. Na segunda parte, os capítulos exploram tanto os limites do trabalho assalariado formal na América Latina e seus efeitos sobre as formas de subjetivação e organização dos trabalhadores quanto examinam transformações no núcleo duro do mercado de trabalho formal, inteiramente modificado pelas transformações nas relações de produção e nas estratégias de produção de legitimidade e identidade profissional. A terceira seção traz um conjunto de capítulos que examinam os sentidos do espaço na gestão das cidades, das comunidades que têm resistido e resistem aos processos de colonização/desenvolvimento e das diferenças, encerrando-se com a tradução de um artigo de Elizabeth Povinelli. O livro começou a ser preparado em 2019 e foi atravessado tanto pela pandemia quanto por transformações no âmbito da política institucional por todo o continente, processos que deixaram suas marcas nas preocupações partilhadas pelos autores e na própria perspectiva de seguir pensando em comum as possibilidades e os desafios de nosso presente.

Palavras-chave:
América Latina, Governamentalidade, Neoliberalismo, Estado

Emeritus Professor Stephen J Ball will be giving a presentation as part of the Foucault 40 Years After World Congress.

Registration link

Webinar details: Tuesday 4th June 20:00-21:30 (AEST), 11:00-12:30 (UTC)

Why do we write? Or would Foucault thrive in the contemporary university?

I want to say something about Foucault’s conception of the role and purpose of academic writing, and particularly self-formation, critique and truth telling – what Graeme Burchell (1996) called the ‘ethics of intellectual work’. And use that to think about the role and purpose of writing in the contemporary university. And thus consider the problem of “finding oneself not knowing what or how to think”. The tone will be a mix of grimness and celebration.

Stephen J Ball is Emeritus Professor of Sociology of Education at the University College London, Institute of Education. He was elected Fellow of the British Academy in 2006;and is also Fellow of the Society of Educational Studies, and a Laureate of Kappa Delta Phi; he has honorary doctorates from the Universities of Turku (Finland), and Leicester. He is co-founder of the Journal of Education Policy. His main areas of interest are in theoretical informed education policy analysis; the relationships between education, education policy and social class; and thinking education without school. He has written academic 20 books, and a series of detective stories (The Enemies of Truth KDP 2023) and has published over 140 journal articles. Recent books: Edu.Net (Routledge 2017) and Foucault as Educator (Springer 2017).

Chair/s: Associate Professors Richard Niesche and Denise Mifsud

Leonard D’Cruz,
Foucault’s naturalism: The importance of scientific epistemology for the genealogical method, Philosophy & Social Criticism, March 16, 2024

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/01914537241235571

Abstract:
This article offers a novel reconstruction of Foucault’s methodology that emphasises his respect for the natural sciences. Foucault’s work has long been suspected of reducing knowledge to power, and thus collapsing into unconstrained relativism and methodological incoherence. These concerns are predicated on a misunderstanding of Foucault’s overall approach, which takes the form of a historico-critical project rather than a normative epistemology. However, Foucault does sometimes make normative epistemological judgements, especially about the human sciences. Furthermore, there are outstanding questions about what secures the descriptive rigour of the genealogical method. To address these issues, I develop two claims that will significantly enrich our understanding of Foucault’s methodology. The first is that Foucault’s respect for the natural sciences is crucial in making sense of his normative epistemological judgements. The second is that the descriptive rigour of his genealogical method derives from the fact it is modelled on empirical inquiry.

Gordon Hull, LLM, Inc. New APPS: Art, Politics, Philosophy, Science blog, 27 February 2024

In previous posts (one, two, three), I’ve been exploring the issue of what I’m calling the implicit normativity in language models, especially those that have been trained with RLHF (reinforcement learning with human feedback). In the most recent one, I argued that LLMs are dependent on what Derrida called iterability in language, which most generally means that any given unit of language, to be language, has to be repeatable and intelligible as language, in indefinitely many other contexts. Here I want to pursue that thought a little further, in the context of Derrida’s (in)famous exchange with John Searle’s speech act theory.
[…]

Let’s look at intentionality first. In responding to Searle, Derrida explains that he finds himself “to be in many respects quite close to Austin, both interested in and indebted to his problematic” and that “when I do raise questions or objections, it is always at points where I recognize in Austin’s theory presuppositions which are the most tenacious and the most central presuppositions of the continental metaphysical tradition” (38). Derrida means by this a reliance on things like subjectivity and representation – the sorts of things that Foucault is getting at when he complains in the 1960s about philosophies of “the subject” (think: Sartre and phenomenology).
[…]

Baxter, K.I.
Cecily Shoots a Rhinoceros: Big Game Hunting in British Somaliland and the 1900 Convention for the Preservation of Wild Animals, Birds and Fish in Africa
(2023) Law and Literature

DOI: 10.1080/1535685X.2023.2289771

Abstract
In 1900, seven European nations gathered in London to agree the Convention for the Preservation of Wild Animals, Birds and Fish in Africa. The Convention sought to regulate game hunting across the African continent, in response to the decimation of wildlife that unregulated hunting for sport and ivory had caused. Six years later, Agnes Herbert and her cousin Cecily set out from London to British Somaliland on a big game hunt. In this article, I explore the interrelationships of memoirs, such as Agnes Herbert’s, with law and literary imagination in the creation of a colonial conservation culture. I do so by invoking Foucault’s thinking about heterotopias. I unpack the temporal modalities in which ideas about big game operate in administrative and literary texts: both the idea of a lost golden age and, more particularly, the futurities of big game that they construct and debate through ideas of “preservation.”. © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

Author Keywords
big game; British Empire; heterotopia; memoir; Somaliland