The works of Foucault focus on an inter-relationship between power and knowledge using the methodology of what he terms Archaeology and Genealogy.
These methodologies dig out the historical conditions for various forms of knowledge. It is in this context that he develops the concept of epistemes, which when uncovered provide explanations for how knowledge became established as knowledge. For Foucault knowledge is power and power is knowledge and thus he brings into question the objectivity of knowledge itself. The human subject is de-centred in that subjectivity and volition are social constructions. This approach is not teleological, for Foucault history is not progressing towards some end, it is not progressive in any sense, therefore it is not assumed that one episteme is better than another- only that each episteme is dominated by different forms of knowing and therefore power is at different times concentrated in the hands of those who possess the knowledge. Power and knowledge are entangled and like Neitzche, Foucault sees a world in which there is a constant competition for power that will never be resolved, but that will and does generate changes in the way of knowing, changes in truths. Although knowledge is power, Foucault argues that power is an intrinsic part of the process of being an individual, it is not something from which mankind struggles to be emancipated from, but something that as an individual man seeks to use to define his individualism. In Madness and Civilisation Foucault uses madness as a method of critique of bourgeois reason in the capitalist system, he illustrates different discourses surrounding madness since the middle ages, in this episteme madness was regarded as a sign of Gods grace or anger- truth, knowledge and ergo power were of course concentrated in a supreme being , later during the renaissance period madness was associated with the wisdom of folly as illustrated by the ship of fools setting out on a journey of destiny. In the classical age madness became associated with illness due to laziness and bodily deterioration and was treated by a series of weird and often cruel treatments, which concentrated on restoration of morals to the afflicted individuals, thus stripping the insane of human dignity. It was the conversion of the asylum into a medical space that began to form the society of the insane into a microcosm of the values and morals based bourgeois society. This brought about social condemnation of the insane. The sane were moral and worked hard the insane were immoral and lazy.
Psychoanalysis transformed this picture of the asylum into a more medicalised version but only on the surface, deeper underlying analysis reveals that the expertise of the psychoanalyst himself has replaced the authority in whom expert knowledge is vested and thus, the psychoanalyst has merely transferred the power of the institution of the asylum to himself and his science. He has concentrated power in his discourse.
The birth of the clinic is an excellent example of Foucaults archaeological methods, and although it has been criticised as being very close to a structuralist approach, it exposes the birth of a powerful new discourse about the body and traces the development of the medical discourse from its infancy based on the individual as a balance of humours to a stage where humans are viewed as the sum of their constituent parts. The different ways of knowing about the body have allowed the medical profession to establish a discourse of expertise about human life and legitimised the states intrusion into even the minute of everyday life. Transferring surveillance from the sick body to the healthy body. Man has through the power of this discourse become a creature to be observed, to be studied and a creature for whom living is an endless series of risks. The medico-administrative society has legitimised surveillance of the individual and policing of the individual, thus illustrating that knowledge and in particular the ability to contribute to and have expertise in the language of expert discourses creates power. Think of the new discourse of terrorism and its implications for surveillance and the way in which this has been formed into laws for our protection and the rise in the politics of fear, thus allowing the state to exert greater social control over the individual citizens.
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- 2005-06-07 @ 21:13:36
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- 2005-06-08 @ 23:51:12
i hope so Ian thats one thing we have plenty of here in Scotland.
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- 2005-06-18 @ 21:03:34
No discussions shaz p'raps they are all middle class. (confession, I am too - but a bohemian)
I would have though that trackbacks would make comment fields work like discussion threads and inform a contributor when someone adds to a discussion but it seems not. Maybe we should ask them for something like that. Do you know what I mean? Anyone can comment on the main post, but also each comment becomes a post so it can take on a life of its own. It would keep blogs alive without us having to sit and think up new items.
Get back to me at boggartblog (http://greenteeth.blog.co.uk)___##0##___ if you like the idea, and we will organise the masses and take over the means of blogduction.
best
Ian -
- http://rebbiker.front.ru
- 2005-09-14 @ 11:53:12
Does Foucault, that useless late member of Yahweh's Yakking Yid 'master-race' say anything about the disgusting behavior of Congoids in Western society?
See www.vdare.com/taylor/050913.htm -
- 2005-09-21 @ 14:56:07
thanks for the biggoted comment rebbiker however i shall not dignify it with a response
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- 2008-07-10 @ 10:01:56
Hi,
I would like to respond to Ian's counter arguement about power. Of course money is power and oil is power. Foucault would not argue otherwise. In fact my understanding is that your examples support his notion that humans by nature attempt to use tools to increase their power. Think of how power is used by the middle eastern states with the knowledge that the world "needs" (or at least strongly wants) oil. Think of the states around the world that seek to save money by influencing these states like Saudi Arabia to increase oil production. You might argue that people going to war. is the most obvious of this addiction to using power to get what you want
My understanding of Foucault is that he would say that oil and money themselves are not power but are issues that people attempt to use their power (or lack of it) to get more of. This however, is just the tip of the iceberg as power resides not in what people do but in how people think. How people think is according to Foucault socially constructed and what seems to happen is that the most influencial with society are not necessarily those with "the knowledge" or "the truth" but "the knowledge systems", "the truths" and those that are dominate for example think of how the discourse of Global Warming is becoming increasing dominate as governments around the world use them to justify where money will be spent.-
- 2008-07-25 @ 16:32:07
Tony Benn was making just that point last night on BBC News 24 regarding how the reporting of the Dow Jones over rides what people really want to know about and how through the media we are being manipulated to think of politics as being all about the prevailing economic system and personalities and not what its really about - PEOPLE and the ISSUES PEOPLE FACE IN THEIR DAILY LIVES - Tony really should have been PM - he is one of the few who really understands what politics is sposed to be about.

ianrthorpe
Yeah but...no but.....yeah but... ;-)
Information is power. What we know can only grant power over those who do not know it. Or maybe ignorance is power. In Europe we agonise over the state of the planet because we know things are out of control. In America they don't give a shit and so they get more powerful. We have the moral high ground of course, but will that matter when we are all dead?
Well constructed essay Shaz, but in the modern world there are too many alternatives. Money is power, oil is power. Pretty soon water will be power.
best
Ian