Friday, December 30, 2011
Winter Term Reading Schedule
Reading schedule as follows (meetings Thurs 1.30p in PLC 314):
Jan 12 - Ch 1
Jan 19 - Ch 2
Jan 26 - Ch 3
Feb 2 - Ch 4
Feb 9 - Chs 5 & 6
Feb 16 - Ch 7
Feb 23 - discussion with Amy Allen
Mar 1 - read Concluding Reflections of 'POS'
Mar 8 - tbd
Friday, November 18, 2011
11.16.11, The Courage of Truth, Chs. 9 & 10
Questions, discussion topics
-174, 179: Cynicism as a transhistorical category: what is a trans-historical category?
-Return to the question of ethnocentrism, e.g., Socrates; is he only arguing that Socratic practice is sufficient, though not necessary?
-161, 164-6: what's the relationship between metaphysics of the soul and the stylistics of existence?
-historical accuracy (pretty big claims)? too general? what difference does it make?
-165: what's the significance of noting that Cynical stylistics of existence takes place without doctrinal mediation?
-does he reduce the care of self to the aesthetics of existence? is this where care of self becomes self-styling?
Trans-historical Cynicism:
-'no universals' (from BofBio): presupposition; methodological supposition
-so here, he is supposing that there is the possibility of a trans-historical universal, viz., Cynicism
-there are other places where he uses similar language
-it's a mistake to confuse something trans-historical with a universal; here he is tracing a particular (something) in its continuity
-what's at stake for him in doing things this way?
-180: we cannot understand more contemporary forms of Cynicism without understanding its continuity; however, we cannot say they are exactly similar
-but carefully defining Cynicism allows us to see how he is really making a somewhat humble claim, i.e., that a particular practice has remained somewhat stable over time
-he is not asserting that Cynicism is universal; trans-historical does not imply universality; all it implies is some sort of continuity
-174: runs through the whole of western history; 178: from Antiquity to our present time
-it seems that the purpose of genealogical inquiry is to render history discontinuous; but it is also an empirical explanation of a particular continuity
-also, the second hour of the lecture is offered as an experiment
-once methodological constraints are established, then empirical claims can be made with respect to the object of the study
-he is interested in finding continuity in non-doctrinal form: practices that carry over; in this case, practices that are constitutive of a particular tradition, viz., the western tradition; practices are carried over and maintained (i.e., not offering a trans-historical ontology, but rather an account of how truth-telling has come to be associated with ontology)
-but this is different than Foucault's prior strategies: he is not doing something like overturning the 'repressive hypothesis,' he is attempting to define an aesthetics of existence
-narrowed in scope; still trans-historical, but not universal; situated methodologically as an attitude and way of being rather than a doctrine
-Cynicism as a stylistics of existence that is not deeply related to a metaphysics of the soul; this is not the same as there not being a theoretical framework
-what's an example of a practice that takes place without doctrinal mediation?: gender norms (one can give a fairly elaborate theoretical account, but one need not have a theory in order to practice gender norms)
-practices can be related to doctrine that is not necessarily tied to the doctrine (e.g., the changes within Christian religious practice)
-practices may be transmitted without reference to a body of doctrine
-what's interesting to Foucault in Cynicism is a certain kind of parrhesiatic insolence transmitted without a whole lot of doctrinal training
-what seems important is that we can analytically distinguish between one set of practices and another; in this case, we can see how, although a metaphysics of the soul was tightly wedded to a stylistics of existence in Socratic philosophy, this is not the case in Cynicism
-these are practices that have carried over without doctrinal mediation
-the problem then is how we would verify this continuity
-disappearance of parrhesia connected to the disappearance of destitution; can we connect this with the prevalance of capitalism? there are no 'scandalous manifestations of an unacceptable truth?' (186)
-destitution is not a necessary feature of Cynicism, e.g., artist
-they are less scandalous because they are parasitic on other modes of veridiction
-are these contemporary forms (in hour two, chap. 10) really not scandalous? are these parrhesiatic?
-modern art, for example, is only scandalous in a banal way; but we are not talking about contemporary art, which is perhaps just evidence of the how difficult it has become for art to retain the scandalous nature of modern art
-counterexample, Claire Fontaine (art collective): set of keys to galleries, map of U.S. made of matchsticks
-link to Cynicism in modern art (186)
-the scandal does happen: perhaps only to individuals or groups rather than to society as a whole
-a scandalization must be the manifestation of an unacceptable truth
-Occupy as an example of Cynical mode of life
-so what exactly makes something scandalous?: the mode of life (170-1); in the case of the artist, there must be some form of being that has a truth to it that manifests in a style of living that is scandalous, precisely because this manner of being is unacceptable, and this practice is transmitted with a minimal of theoretical development in its transmission
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Nov. 9, The Courage of Truth, Chs. 5-6
Discussion of Foucault's The Courage of Truth, 1984 CdeF Lectures, Chs. 5-6
- The difference between a modality of veridiction and a technique/ techne (p. 85); as relating to the self: “what is the significance of the modality of veridiction being part of the technology of the self?”
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Notes from 11/2/11, The Courage of the Truth, 1 February 1984 lecture
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Oct 26, "Hermeneutics of the Self" lecture
MF discusses four technologies (domination, production, signification, and self). What is the best metaphor for conceptualizing the relations between these? Overlap? Interweaving? Interdigitation? A separate but related questions: Are these analytical categories? Or are they direct objects of inquiry?
What is the relationship b/w exomologesis and discipline? Is the one beyond the other? Or are they inter-related?
What is the role of rationality for the self that exercises the techniques MF is describing in the article? Is this a rational process? Or is this something beyond rationality?
Self as a form of self-fashioning without a biological account. MF says “the self is nothing else than the historical correlation of the technology built in our history” (222). Is MF dispensing with an account of human nature? What kinds of constraints would our biological body operationalize?
Truth and sacrifice as technologies of the self, presented by MF as a specifically Christian formation rather than a product of the logos in general. Does this fit a religious history? A related question concerns the attempt to keep verbalization but drop self-sacrifice from it, “the deep desire to to substitute the positive figure of man for the sacrifice which for Christianity was the condition for the opening of the self as a field of indefinite interpretation” (222).
Two distinctions were offered with relation to the biology question, which was first elaborated in terms of the example of a man who after many years of monogamous marriage developed a proclivity for pedophilia, and it was then later discovered that this was caused by a brain tumor. This seems to be an example of a hard material constraint operating independently of technologies of the self, &c..
Let’s distinguish two questions. Is Foucault giving a theory of the self? Or is he situating a problematics of the self for us today? “Maybe the problem of the self is not to discover what it is in its positivity, maybe the problem is not to discover a positive self or the positive foundation of the self” (222).
Let’s distinguish two kinds of accounts that might be given to the latter question. Is he giving an account of technologies of the self? Or is he giving an account that contradicts biology and an account that leaves biology out? If there is an issue it is with the “nothing else than” in “the self is nothing else than the historical correlation [yada yada]” (222).
Is Foucault positioning history (“our history”) as a catechresis that points outside the text and the operation, but cannot be accounted for within the text?
Where does Foucault locate the conditions of possibility of the present? Where should he? Are there material conditions? Or only historical conditions, which Foucault is calling ‘technological’?
Also, do we need to distinguish between the category of the self and the category of the human being? The concept of the self is a specification of a field of analysis.
It was suggested that there may be an important distinction between self-reflectiveness and its lack in the context of technologies of the self. The point about reflectiveness brought us to the question about constraints and possibilities where the self comes into contact with forms of rationality.
What makes a self happen? (A wonderful question.) Is rationality part of that which facilitates elaboration of the self? If so, in what sense? Certainly there is reflectiveness at the heart of the self. This then raises the question of ways in which certain forms of reflectiveness get elaborated as true or false, rational or mad, &c., &c..
Rationality for MF is a set of constraints. The constraints are rational in the sense that there is a logic or coherence. So this is not a classical notion of reason but rather a methodological conception of rationality. (Is it that rationality is here a technology or techniques of signification?)
What is the difference that reflectiveness makes? Is reflectiveness that which makes a self happen? What emerges when reflectiveness happens? Foucault suggests at one point that “ethics… [is] the reflective practice of freedom” (EW1.284).
So how would we schematize or analyze the relations between the techniques?
Discussion concerned terminological slippage: technologies of domination (1980 lectures) v. technologies of power (1982 lectures).
To what extent do we need the idea or analytical category of a techniques of the self?
The technologies are heading for different logics. All four logics are copresent in any significant human practice.
We ended with discussion of MF’s counterposing of self-sacrifice to self-truth (cf. 222).
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Notes for 10.19.11: History of Sexuality, Volume I
This week we are discussing History of Sexuality, Volume 1 (HSV1), pp. 81-102 and 151-159
We began, as usual, with our list of questions:
-relation of HSV1 to previous weeks (i.e., regarding 'the self')
-102: distinction between tactical productivity and strategical integration
-94-5: power relations as intentional but nonsubjective: rationality without 'headquarters', the anti-conspiracy-theorist model
-94: his analysis of power seems to replace this force of domination, cf. DP (Foucault seems to be uncutting his analysis; power seems to take the place of the 'cunning of history')
-on the contrary, if his analysis holds, then: what is resistance? how is it not totalizing?
-93-97 (esp. 93 and 95): "power is a moving substrate of force relations..."; is resistance just a form of power? why call it resistance?
-90: distinction between law and 'technology' as forms of governance
-152: bodies as central to the element of selfhood; what is the order of materiality that is 'the body'? (refer to passage on 155-6; sex and the body, similar to the body and the soul in DP)
There is a way in which MF uses very structuralist language (93: "If we still wish to maintain a separation between war and politics, perhaps we should postulate rather that this multiplicity of force relations can be coded…”); we're just talking about force relations; 'war' and 'politics' are just two different strategies on this model. There may be tensions within this field of force relations, but there is no subjective control over the results of one's 'reform' efforts. Reform efforts, e.g., for prison reformers in DP, had unpredictably dominating effects. So, how can we say then that resistance is really possible? When you're talking about strategies and aims that are operating at the systemic level, doesn't it seem that any individual intervention is non-efficacious? What is the potential for the efficacy of the individual resistor?
Foucault's answer might be that to the extent that we operate within the juridico-discursive theory of power, we are unable to effect resistance, except by accident. In other words, the consolidation of the juridico-discursive theory of power after monarchical rule covers up the power mechanisms that can be more accurately described as constituting our contemporary subjectivity, i.e., disciplinary power and biopower. So resistance will proceed by finding nodes of tactical response, e.g., 'we are the 99%' is resisting, yet is proceeding by not formulating a coherent set of strategies (95-6: “…there is no single locus of great Refusal... there is a plurality of resistances…).
These questions arise: what is the status of theory as a result of MF's analysis? if there is no one to tell us what is the right way to resist, then how might we resist? Yet, at the same time, MF tells us that revolution occurs via 'the strategic codification of these points of resistance that makes a revolution possible...' (96). This is the same way that state power is consolidated (96). So power relations in resistance operate in the same way as those that we would consider oppressive or dominating; what is similar to both is the fact that these are different strategies or tactics. Yet, Foucault will not tell us how to resist, i.e., will not give us a model for resistance as such; he will not give us a categorical imperative, only a 'conditional imperative' (as in STP, i.e., Security, Territory, and Population). This is a weakness. MF is not a normative theorist. Or is this a weakness? He continues to resist 'theory': so that we cannot, once and for all, give an account of 'resistance', or 'power', or 'sex.' He is moving away from the critique of ideology and the juridico-discursive theory of power. The Foucaultian analysis of power then gives us a general account of power relations without prescribing, once and for all, the ways in which we ought to proceed. Yet, he does offer this in HSV1: “The rallying point for the counterattack against the deployment of sexuality ought not to be sex-desire, but bodies and pleasures’’ (157); and ‘’…we need to consider the possibility that one day, perhaps, in a different economy of bodies and pleasures, people will no longer quite understand how the ruses of sexuality… were able to subject us... (159). This is still only a gesture. He says a bit more regarding this later (HSV2 and later works), but still doesn't develop a robust normative project. The upshot might be that the theorist is not going to be able to work in a way that is divorced from practitioners, i.e., the theorist is going to need to be engaged with the processes of resistance for the sake of noting nodes or resistance where they are already in process. The theorist cannot pronounce from on high where resistance ought to take place.
What does Foucault mean by 'desire' and 'pleasure'? For MF, 'desire' is bound up in Christian practices of self-renunciation, whereas to define 'pleasure,' he returns to the Greeks' notion of 'aphrodisia,' which is a concept in which there is no distinction made between desire and pleasure. The appeal that pleasure has for MF—which desire doesn't have—is that it leaves room for self-transformation: when one experiments with and multiplies practices of pleasure, then one might... what? 'Pleasure' as 'pre-discursive,' as in Freud? Not within the matrices of desire; not bound within juridico-discursive power? What if pleasure corresponds to the diffusion of power as in disciplinary power and biopower, whereas as desire corresponds to jurdico-discursive models of power? E.g., Butler's description of heteronormativity as performance precisely outlines the pleasure-discipline correspondence.
This leads us to the question of the body. If pleasure is not constituted by a lack, as in desire, then what status does pleasure have? Where is it located? Is it located in the 'brute body'? The brute body, though, would imply that in seeking or cultivating pleasure, we are seeking to discover our 'true selves.' This cannot be the case. Pleasure is, on the one hand, more expansive than 'sex,' and, on the other hand, Foucault's example of the Greeks is one in which practices of pleasure are thoroughly enculturated: pleasure as a set of practices. We are not 'liberating' ourselves, we are transforming ourselves. Thus, the Foucaultian inquiry into sexuality is a destabilization of our most dearly held tenets of self-identification. The upshot is that the exploration of our sexuality is not going to tell us about our true selves, will not liberate us. Instead, we can move to an economy of techniques, of acts in which, by moving from pleasure to pleasure, we can transform ourselves outside of a model of 'coming to know ourselves.' '[T]hrough a tactical reversal of the various mechanisms of sexuality' (157), we can locate opportunities for resistance with respect to the ways in which we are constituted: sex is an example of a hidden truth of the self, whereas pleasures are acts, i.e., practices that constitute who we are rather than a gateway to the deep truth of the self.
Human beings don't seem to have an internal life, on this model. The soul is produced from the outside-in. In terms of an anthropology, there seems to be something left out. Perhaps there is an outside to discourse, one that is not a cognitive reality. This project cannot fully account for the human being; it is too superficial. Discussion regarding how discourse constitutes reality does not do justice to the fact that there might be things pertinent to selfhood that lie outside of rationality. He wants to say that he's not just doing ideology critique, not just giving a 'history of mentalities'; rather, he is trying to give a ‘‘'history of bodies' and the manner in which what is most material and most vital in them has been invested” (151-2). This is not a merely ephemeral, specular, socially constituted body. In other words, he’s attempting to give us an account that includes human materiality, but does so in a way that does not relegate any aspect of the self or body to a hidden or pre-discursive space. But it seems that he would have to do something more methodologically innovative than frame this in terms of various rationalities of the body, i.e., a 'history of bodies' (152). This brings us to the question of rationality: MF claims that discourse is always tactical and rational (distinguishes between what makes sense and what doesn't make sense). To the extent that the material body is discursively constituted, this seems an impoverished notion of the self, one which doesn't allow for other forms of thinking. MF seems to want to get there, but a self within discourse is a merely speaking/knowing self.
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Notes for 10/12/11: Panopticism
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
Notes for 10-5-11
10-5-11 Foucault Reading Group with Vincent Colapietro
Housekeeping: History of Sexuality reading—p [optional 17-49], 81-102, 150-159
Questions:
Colapietro’s piece
—please explain the distinction b/w social and socialized and why it is useful in talking about Dewey and Foucault. Are they necessary for one another, or is the relation found within the work of either philosopher independently? P 33
--Mf’s agonism and polemics p 36
Foucault “The Ethics of the Concern of the Self as a Practice of Freedom”
286—“a slave has no ethics”? (in MF’s sense)
--why does MF not address patriarchy?
287—ontological priority of self-relation
300—freedom and control of conduct—dodging question
--power in MF a methodology or theory of human nature?
Discussion:
Hermeneutical suspicion is more prominent in MF than Dewey. Foucault is more critical of the normalized subject in which the internalized norms—in a way we’ve ‘been had’ (normalization of sexual desire, etc). Dewey is relatively innocent of ‘being had.’
MF is a more thickly descriptive account with a critical edge. It is not lacking in Dewey, it just not as pronounced. He was a white protestant heterosexual male. He was there for the founding of the NAACP, but he’s not at odds with his society in the ways Foucault was. There is a very different subject position. They are close, but the way it is enacted is somewhat different.
Do you have to be uncomfortable in society in order to have a critical eye? Yes. Dewey was ill at ease and at odds, but not to the extent and in the forms Foucault was.
P 26 of Colapietro—I wonder the extent to which there’s room in profession philosophy for a sort of confluence of transfomation and theory (?). Is a biography like Foucault’s possible in academia today? Need to remember that MF was working in a psychiatric hospital. Also, we are secluded. We are committed—to a cause, to a way of life. Being committed to the madness of professional philosophy and being committed to transformative and emancipatory cause? The unlived life is not worth examining. Dewey is interesting on the other side—what are we going to do with these immigrants? His phil of ed is not abstract. We can’t exploit their labor, we must do something transformative. What are the sites of our everyday lives? Perhaps our interest in MF is only academic.
To turn it back on MF—p 286—maybe this explains the dissatisfaction of the work of the 80s. Maybe the things on the Greeks is somewhat informative as contrast to the Christian tradition, though it doesn’t seem grounded in the ways History of Sexuality and Discipline and Punish are. But perhaps this is the way of reconstituting an ethos. MF is a profoundly Nietzschean thinker—MF is recovering these practices for a purpose. He’s trying to open space for a critical conversation without providing a precise code or method. Method is subordinate to the cultivation of sensibility.
Re-asking the question: why go to the Greeks when he’s talking about ethics? Is this truly not the project. This is for a very distinctly French audience. How are these practices still with us? Perhaps they’ve just be transformed throughout history and are still with us in the asceticism of science, for example. Perhaps MF is excavating on two levels. The general level (284)and the particularized Greek techniques of the Hellenistic period. Maybe the larger project can still be with us. These are deeply ingrained habits, and the process of uprooting them is arduous.
“Freedom is the ontological condition of ethics. But ethics is the considered form that freedom takes when it is informed by reflection” (p 284)—unpack this. Why is freedom ontological? Ethos as a mode of being and behavior and not simply a practice. Is this circular? Brings in the distinction between freedom and liberation.
Decolonization seems to be the paradigm case of liberation. What are we to do with this in relation to what he says about liberation and freedom and the example of sexuality on p 283.
Let’s read MF against MF regarding slaves and ethics. Perhaps slave is more of a conception which lacks a taking up of freedom. Absolutely domination is not the negation of power, so the subject has some modicum of freedom.
The end of Colapietro’s article reminds some of Arendt. She’s been a part of VC’s work for 30 years, though not explicitly written. Docility of body and docility of mind.
P 282-83—liberation from domination v freedom in relations of power. Domination may not be the problem, but there still is a problem. Perhaps on 284, MF is using nondomination and freedom as synonyms.
Freedom in its broadest sense, which may include and require liberation, is the ontological condition for ethics. It is once liberation has been achieved, the work of ethics begins. Cautionary note: freedom may be exercised prior to liberation (e.g. poetry, etc prior to the fall of the Berlin Wall).
Why not put the emphasis on reflective practices as reversing into practices of domination? Might be a historical answer that we have to give about how practices yield, but why haven’t we been talking about this when we were talking analytically?
There may be a strain of humanism implicit in MF, that human nature is rebellious. This may be a historical claim and not an ontological one.
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Sep 28 - "Technologies of the Self"
- How should we construe the intersection of political ambition and philosophical love in the “Care of the Self”? (231)
- What is Foucault’s object? What is he looking at? How is he conceptualizing the self as an object of study? (224)
- How is he defining technologies? What is he omitting?
- How can Foucault’s discussion of writing practices inform how we look at writing today? Digital writing? (232)
- Tension between the technologies of power and technologies of the self? How do you distinguish between you are internalizing (224)
- Technologies of power as a means of knowing? Is objectivizing always bad? What is power? Is power bad? Always bad? (242) (A: no, they're not always bad).
- Why is Judaism omitted, in his discussion of Christianity?
- Formation of the subject at different historical moments. If (1)technologies of power as a method for controlling individuals and (2) technologies of the self are away to circumvent the technologies of power. How does one distinguish that they are not internalizing the domination, as described in Panopticism.
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Fall 2011 Reading Schedule
Thursday, August 18, 2011
2011-12 Project
For the 2011-12 academic year, CGC will focus on the theme of 'The Self'.
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Spring Quarter 2011 Schedule
- Spring Quarter 2011: Tentative schedule...
- Mar 30 - Colin Koopman, Genealogy as Critique, Chapter 1, draft
- Apr 6 - Vernon Carter, response to Collier
- Apr 13 - Thomas Nail, tbd
- Apr 20 - Colin Koopman, Genealogy as Critique, Chapter 3, draft
- Apr 27 - Colin Koopman, Genealogy as Critique, Chapter 4, draft
- May 4 - George Fourlas, on Foucault and Austin
- May 11 - Ed Madison, tbd
- May 18 - Greg Liggett, tbd
- May 25 - Katherine Logan, tbd
- Jun 1 - Nicolae Morar, tbd
Monday, March 7, 2011
Patton, New 'Constellations' article
Discussion Notes on Patton’s, “Life, Legitimation, and Government” (2011, Constellations: 35-45)
We began the discussion, as per usual, with questions.
1. Is Patton making too much of the decrease of focus on biopower in Foucault’s work in the late seventies? Patton suggests that biopower gets eclipsed in MF’s later work when he works with an analytic of governmentality. The article starts with a strong claim, “the concepts of biopolitics and bipower do not play a major role in Foucault’s work.” But the logic of the argument given for this thesis may also suggest that the concept of discipline does not play a major role in Foucault’s work. But that, it was suggested, can’t be right.
2. Is there a positive account of biopower in Patton, beyond the minimalism that Patton negatively suggests? A suggestion: What do techniques of biopower look like? Are these techniques ever dissociated from discipline? What about the idea (not nec. In Patton) that biopower does not have its own techniques, but always relies on techniques of other forms of power. This suggests that biopower is strictly representational, and not concerned with practice. Biopower as such is a discourse object, but not an object of practice.
3. We need another chart to figure out the relationship between governmentality, disciplinary power, biopower, security, etc.. Why can’t biopower be a way of thinking about a certain form that governmentality takes?
4. We need to come to terms with the following analytical distinction(s): Exercise of power | Representation of power (p. 38 and throughout). Does this map to a genealogy | archaeology distinction? (Answer: maybe.) What other distinctions does it map to? Does it map to a general | particular distinction? (Answer: no.) What is Patton’s claim about biopower in terms of this distinction?
With questions on the table, discussion of questions then began. We focused mostly on (2) and (4).
2. With respect to this question, a view was suggested that biopower is discursive rather than practical (call this view BD=biopower as discourse). The discussion at this point did not tack too closely to the article, but it was tied in later with the discussion of (4) that ensued.
BD: biopower operates on the level of discourse or representation, but is not itself a technique. Patton is not suggesting this explicitly, but it is one of making sense of Foucault's usage of biopower based upon the reading offered in the article.
BP: It was objected against BD that the very point of the concept of biopower is to suggest that populations can be a direct object of scrutiny, and thus that techniques that work over this object are themselves evidence of biopower functioning at the level of the exercise of power (call this view BP=biopower as practice).
BD: The response on behalf of BD was that, at the level of deployment, the techniques cannot be strictly biopolitical. The suggestion, clarified, is that there are techniques that get deployed on behalf of biopower, but that the difference that is biopower occurs at the level of discourse rather than practice.
BP: It was objected to BD that there are specifically biopolitical techniques: statistical sampling, vaccination, inoculation, economic techniques such as trade tariffs, &c..
BD: The response on behalf of BD was that these techniques, in order to be deployed, must be deployed at the individual level, and so rely on discipline.
BP: The objection to this was that of course biopower will tend to make use of disciplinary individualization in order to perform its work, but that biopower also implements techniques of its own. What are most measures of public health if not deployments of power at the level of the exercise of power, with its own distinctive ensemble of apparatus, technicians, and techniques?
BD: You can always traces these uses back to populations, even if these populations weren’t recognized as such. This suggests that Agamben, or at least a certain reading of him, was right: discipline and biopower were always essential to politics, and that biopower was about representation, and discipline about technique/exercise.
…
These objections to BD were forwarded by most of the group on behalf of a view suggesting something like BDP (biopower is discursive and practical at once, and that is the point of a genealogy). STill, it should be accepted that for most examples we could draw on, those that are organized by biopolitics are also organized by discipline. It must be underscored that the difference between biopower and discipline is not a dichotomy but rather a distinction. One concluding thought: biopower, discipline, sovereignty are all modes of power: they are enacted at both the representational (conceptual) and the practical (material) level and there are distinctive uses of each on both registers. But there are manifest overlaps.
4. We then discussed the representation | technique (or theory | practice) analytical distinction. This distinction does not map to that between general | particular. The distinction rather maps to that between technology and technique, or discourse (logic) and practice (action), or concept and materiality. This is a useful analytical distinction, but Foucault’s advantage is that he did not turn it into a dichotomy. In Hacking’s term, the value of archaeology and genealogy is that it provides an analytic for getting a grip on ‘looping effects’.
Patton thinks Foucault confuses representation and technique (“Foucault confuses the exercise and the representation of power” (38)). Patton sees Foucault as claiming to track techniques of power, but presenting findings, at least initially, in terms of representation/theory of power. This seems puzzling to many members of the group. But it fits well with (BD) in (2) above. Patton then suggests a little later that “it is at this level [of the exercise of power] that the transformation takes place” (38).
This leads in the article into a brief, and somewhat confusing for some of us, discussion of Agamben. Patton suggests that Agamben's homo sacer thesis is consistent with Foucault. If Foucault’s work is a representation of biopower, then this is consistent with Agamben’s representation of the seed of life in sovereign power. So Agamben is a good Foucaultian, but only if Foucault’s work on power is primarily operating at the level of representation.
It was suggested by some that Patton seems to think that biopower for Foucault is a representational concept, and that transformations in the workings of power are developed by Foucault in the light of analytical constructions such as security, neoliberalism, etc.. Biopower, as a representation, is always mediated by a technique.
But is Foucault’s work on biopower just a representation? This seems like a puzzling claim. Foucault’s work is never just representation or just technique. (Is this what Patton is claiming?) Foucault’s genealogies work at the level of representation and technique, and this is also the case with biopower.
Admin Discussion/Notes
Spring Qtr Reading Schedule below
Note: We will be reading each other’s work on methodological questions/issues during Spring term.
Note: Meetings Wed 11a-1p, location tba
Colin – three or four chapters from forthcoming Genealogy ms. (read early)
Vernon – response to Collier concerning topology (ready early)
Greg – a piece (for Poli Sci Methods course) on method with an empirical focus (ready late)
George – material on Austin & Foucault (ready early-late)
Nicolae – on Foucault & Chomsky (ready late)
Katherine – a piece on genealogy (ready mid-late)
Paul Rabinow – April 13th in anticipation of possible April 15th visit
so that amounts to 9 pieces for 9 weeks (plus maybe week 10)