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Ø Prepared
by : KAVITABA P. GOHIL
Ø Roll
No :
19
Ø Paper
– 8 :
CULTURAL STUDIES
Ø TOPIC:
POWER/KNOWLEDGE: Selected Interviews and Other Writings [1972-1977] by Michel
Foucault
Ø M.A
(English) : Sem -2
Ø Enrollment
No: 2069108420180018
Ø Batch :
2017-19
Ø Email :
kavitabaprahaladsinhjigohil@gmail.com
Ø Submitted
to : Smt .S. B Gardi, Department of English, MKBU.
POWER/KNOWLEDGE:
Selected Interviews and Other Writings [1972-1977] by Michel Foucault
Ø
Preface:
Foucault was interested in the way power and structures
depended upon structure of knowledge and how, once they acquire knowledge, create
subjects to be controlled. Foucault’s methodology seeks to understand how some
sections of the population have been classified as criminals or insane. That
is, he is interested in understanding processes of classification that helped
exclude some people from society. Foucault argues that certain authorities who
possess power in society produce knowledge about those who lack power. Such a
system of knowledge is called “discourse”. The arts, religion, science and the
law are discourse that ‘produce’ particular subjects.
Ø Illustrations from some of his
important interviews:
Interviewer: Network of forms of control (quadrillage) is set in
place. Is the liberation possible without the quadrillage? (Foucault)
Foucault: As always with relations of power, one is faced with complex
phenomena which don't obey the Hegelian form of the dialectic. Mastery and
awareness of one's own body can be acquired only through the effect of an
investment of power in the body: gymnastics, exercises, muscle-building,
nudism, glorification of the body beautiful. All of this belongs to the pathway
leading to the desire of one's own body, by way of the insistent, persistent,
meticulous work of power on the bodies of children or soldiers, the healthy bodies.
But once power produces this effect, there inevitably emerge the responding
claims and affirmations, those of one's own body against power, of health
against the economic system, of pleasure against the moral norms of sexuality,
marriage, and decency. Suddenly, what had made power strong becomes used to
attack it. Power, after investing itself in the body, finds itself exposed to a
counterattack in that same body. Do you recall the panic of the institutions of
the social body, the doctors and politicians, at the idea of non-legalised
cohabitation (l'union fibre) or free abortion? But the impression that power
weakens and vacillates here is in fact mistaken; power can retreat here,
re-organise its forces, invest itself elsewhere . . . and so the battle continues. (Foucault)
Interviewer: Your study is concentrated on all those micro-powers
that are exercised at the level of daily life. Aren't you neglecting the State
apparatus here? (Foucault)
Foucault: It's true that since the late nineteenth century Marxist and
'Marxised' revolutionary movements have given special importance to the State
apparatus as the stake of their struggle. What were the ultimate consequences
of this? In order to be able to fight a State which is more than just a
government, the revolutionary movement must possess equivalent
politico-military forces and hence must constitute itself as a party, organised
internally in the same way as a State apparatus with the same mechanisms of
hierarchies and organisation of powers. This consequence is heavy with
significance. Secondly, there is the question, much discussed within Marxism
itself, of the capture of the State apparatus: should this be considered as a
straightforward take-over, accompanied by appropriate modifications, or should
it be the opportunity for the destruction of that apparatus? You know how the
issue was finally settled. The State apparatus must be undermined, but not
completely undermined, since the class struggle will not be brought to an
immediate end with the establishment of the dictatorship of the proletariat.
Hence the State apparatus must be kept sufficiently intact for it to be
employed against the class enemy. So we reach a second consequence: during the period
of the dictatorship of the proletariat, the State apparatus must to some extent
at least be maintained. Finally then, as a third consequence, in order to
operate these State apparatuses which have been taken over but not destroyed,
it will be necessary to have recourse to technicians and specialists. And in
order to do this one has to call upon the old class which is acquainted with
the apparatus, namely the bourgeoisie. This clearly is what happened in the
USSR. I don't claim at all that the State apparatus is unimportant, but it
seems to me that among all the conditions for avoiding a repetition of the
Soviet experience and preventing the revolutionary process from running into
the ground, one of the first things that has to be understood is that power
isn't localised in the State apparatus and that nothing in society will be
changed if the mechanisms of power that function outside, below and alongside
the State apparatuses, on a much more minute and everyday level, are not also
changed. (Foucault)
·
His Lecture
Lecture on: 7 January 1976
I have sketched a genealogical history of the origins of a
theory and knowledge of anomaly and of the various techniques that relate to
it. I would say, then, that what has emerged in the Course of the last ten or
fifteen years is a sense of the increasing vulnerability to criticism of
things, institutions, practices, and discourses. (Foucault)
In Archaeology of Knowledge Foucault discusses the concept of
discourse. In his view, “the great theme of the history of ideas is the genesis
of idea, their continuity over time, as well as tantalizations such as the
spirit of an age. He looks at the ideas of a period both in their continuity
and discontinuity. He prefers detailed analyses of statements of ideas to
global generalizations about totalities. He rejects totalizing of ideas quite
like his later postmodernists,” In this context, Foucault articulates four
principles that distinguish the archaeology of knowledge from the history of
ideas. (Foucault, POWER AND KNOWLEDGE:
MICHEL FOUCAULT)
·
A
concept-map of designations of deviance and their remedies in history as
produced by specific ‘authorities’.
CATEGORY
|
DISCOURSE
|
AUTHORITY
|
CORRECTIVE
|
Immorality
|
Religion
|
Priest
|
Penitence
|
Vagrancy
|
Economics
|
Economist/
Social commentator
|
Forced
employment
|
Criminal
|
law
|
Police/Jury/Judge
|
Imprisonment
|
Insane
|
Psychiatry
|
Psychiatrist/Psychoanalyst
|
Asylum
|
Sick
|
Medicine
|
Physician
|
Hospital
|
The last column, ‘corrective’ marks the actual enforcement of
power or process/act, where the ‘authorities’ ensure that the deviance is
rectified according to what they think is right-
Discourse and knowledge produce certain categories of ‘subjects’
who are then treated in particular ways: the immoral are ‘remedied’ by priests,
criminals are jailed by the law, the sick are treated by doctors, and the insane
shut away in asylums by psychiatrists. What happens, therefore, is that the
production of knowledge about those who lack power leads to very effective
practice of power on the part of the authorities. Knowledge and classification
system such as medicine, the law, or religion are therefore modes of social
control. (nayar)
Foucault indeed focuses on the concept of power. He remarked that he
produced the analysis of power relations rather than the genealogies. Foucault
began talking about power as soon as he began to do genealogy in The Order of
Discourse. In Discipline and Punish he develops a notion of “power-knowledge”.
It recombines the analysis of the epistemic with analysis of the political.
Knowledge for Foucault is unfathomable apart from power, although Foucault
continues to insist on the relative autonomy of discourse. (Foucault,
POWER AND KNOWLEDGE: MICHEL FOUCAULT)
Power and knowledge identify and classify individual subject
as mad or ill. The task is to analyse the working of power and knowledge within
a social set-up. These can be at the level of the family unit or at the level
of the nation-state. There is, therefore, no such thing as neutral or objective
knowledge because knowledge is always used to serve the interests of the
dominant groups.
After Foucault we know that discourses produce particular
subjects, who are subject to control. People who lack the power to determine
their lives and future are said to lack agency. They are called ‘subalterns’.
Every social formation has its own subalterns. The dominant groups in social
structures that construct subalterns also use particular modes to ensure that
the subaltern remains powerless. One such means of keeping the power relation
in favour of the dominant category is ideology. Ideology is system of beliefs
and ideas that permeates social formations. Ideology justifies oppression and
social inequalities by suggesting that the lower classes have always been
inferior and persuades them of the validity of this belief. That is, ideology
circulates as a system of representation and images that ‘naturalizes’
oppression and creates the illusion that oppression is natural. (nayar)
Bibliography
Foucault, Michel.
"POWER AND KNOWLEDGE: MICHEL FOUCAULT." Shodhganga. 4 April
2018 <http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/97461/8/08_chapter%2003.pdf>.
Foucault, Michel. "Power/Knowledge Selected Interviews
and Other Writings-1972_1977." Gordon, Colin. New york: Pantheon Books,
June-1975. 56-62.
nayar, Pramod k. An introduction to cultural studies.
Viva Books, 2008.
1 comment:
Really helpful in this exam time.👍
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