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         Foucault Michel:     more books (100)
  1. "Society Must Be Defended": Lectures at the Collège de France, 1975-1976 by Michel Foucault, 2003-12-01
  2. The Essential Foucault by Michel Foucault, Nikolas Rose, 2003-08-22
  3. Foucault's Philosophy of Art: A Genealogy of Modernity (Philosophy, Aesthetics and Cultural Theory) by Joseph J. Tanke, 2009-08-30
  4. Foucault: His Thought, His Character by Paul Veyne, 2010-09-14
  5. Michel Foucault: Genealogy as Critique by Rudi Visker, 1995-07-01
  6. El nacimiento de la clinica (Spanish Edition) by Michel Foucault, 2001-01-01
  7. Foucault Beyond Foucault: Power and Its Intensifications Since 1984 by Jeffrey Nealon, 2007-11-12
  8. A Foucault Primer: Discourse, Power and the Subject by Alec Mchoul, Wendy Grace, 1997-06-01
  9. The Political Philosophy of Michel Foucault (Routledge Studies in Social and Political Thought) by Mark G.E. Kelly, 2008-11-21
  10. The Cambridge Introduction to Michel Foucault (Cambridge Introductions to Literature) by Lisa Downing, 2008-10-06
  11. Michel Foucault (Core Cultural Theorists Series) by Dr Clare O'Farrell, 2005-10-10
  12. Michel Foucault: Maurice Blanchot: The Thought from Outside / Maurice Blanchot: Michel Foucault as I Imagine Him by Michel Foucault, Maurice Blanchot, 1989-10-19
  13. Foucault on Politics, Security and War
  14. The Chomsky-Foucault Debate: On Human Nature by Noam Chomsky, Michel Foucault, 2006-09-13

41. Foucault Web Page - Links To Management And Organization Implications - Boje Web
INTERVIEW Excerpts from interview with michel foucault, michel foucault The anti-history of psychiatry - a teaching seminar at York University (press
http://business.nmsu.edu/~dboje/foucault.html
Michel Foucault - Nexus - MOVE BETWEEN Postmodern SITES
Gameboards Menu Storytelling Organization Gameboard Transorganization Development Gameboard Green Accounting Gameboard Small Business Consulting Gameboard Academics Studying Nike Web Page Postmodern Organization Theory In The News Items Deconstructing Las Vegas FREEManaging Postmod World Book David Boje's Home Page Grace Ann Rosile's Home Page ZiaNet Frames menu Site Map
More Recommended Sites for Managing Scholars Scholars menu Adam Smith Nietzsche Debord Foucault Links Sartre Jean-Paul Weber McLuhan Academics Studying Nike Web Page Postmodern Organization Theory In The News Items Deconstructing Las Vegas Project Critical Art Ensemble Darwin's Book CT resource page Feminist CT Marx Manifesto Marx 18th Brumaire Marx Das Kapital Philosophy for Everyone Existentialism Cool CT Cases Upcoming Conferences Semiotics Beginners Walt Disney 's Testimony David Boje's Home Page Grace Ann Rosile's Home Page HorseSenseAtWork Site Map
How to become a postmodern theorist Pomo Menu Intro to Affirmative/Skeptical Postmod Stury 4 main philosophies Intro postmod org theory 4 Philosophies of QM See annotated postmod books annotated CT books Neat bootm for postmod science

42. Michel Foucault - Philosopher - Biography
A biography, a bibliography, some resources as well as links of the French philosopher.
http://www.egs.edu/resources/foucault.html
var baseDir = '../'; @import url("../style/ie.css"); EGS Home MA in Communication PhD in Communication Admin ... EGS Online
Michel Foucault
Links
Biography
Michel Foucault Madness and Unreason: History of Madness in the Classical Age , 1961). In this text, Foucault abolished the possibility of separating madness and reason into universally objective categories. He does this by studying how the division has been historically established, how the distinctions we make between madness and sanity are a result of the invention of madness in the Age of Reason. He does a reading of Descartes' First Meditation , and accuses him of being able to doubt everything except his own sanity, thus excluding madness from hyperbolic doubt. In the 1960s Foucault was head of the philosophy departments at the University of Clemont-Ferrand, and at the Vincennes Experimental University Centre. It was at this time that he met the philosophy student Daniel Defert, whose political activism would be a major influence on Foucault. When Defert went to fulfill his volunteer service requirement in Tunisia, Foucault followed, teaching in Tunisia from 1966-68. They returned to Paris during the time of the student revolts, an event that would have a profound effect on Foucault's work. He took the position of head of the Philosophy Department at the University of Paris-VII at Vincennes where he brought together some of the most influential thinkers in France at the time. It was in 1968 that he formed, with others, the Prison Information Group, an organization that gave voice to the concerns of prisoners.

43. Foucault
Include notes towards Technologies of the Self and good resources for a reading group. By Jeremy Crampton, Department of Anthropology Geography Georgia
http://monarch.gsu.edu/jcrampton/foucault/
Michel Foucault
There are many (excellent) Websites which discuss Foucault's work from a textual point of view. These pages however aim to illustrate some of the topics he discusses in order to bring them to life. Pictures in general are absent in Foucault scholarship, but I think they are an important part of the equation: Pictures of the two prisons in Philadelphia discussed by Foucault in . These pictures were omitted from the English edition of , but appeared in the initial French version from Editions Gallimard Notes Towards Technologies of the Self
Resources for the Atlanta reading group
Foucault and cat in his apartment
Foucault homepage
department

44. Foucault Blog
foucault Event Gouverner les vivants à partir de michel foucault Le cours que michel foucault prononce en 1983 au Collège de France inaugure une
http://foucaultblog.wordpress.com/
Foucault blog ... Comments RSS

45. Michel Foucault: Panopticism
Source foucault, michel Discipline Punish The Birth of the Prison (NY Vintage Books 1995) pp. 195228. translated from the French by Alan Sheridan
http://www.cartome.org/foucault.htm
cartome.org 16 June 2001. With paragraphs 1-8 added, 22 August 2001
Transcription and HTML by Cartome Source: Foucault, Michel (NY: Vintage Books 1995) pp. 195-228 translated from the French by Alan Sheridan (translation � 1977)
back
to intro PART THREE: DISCIPLINE 3. Panopticism The following, according to an order published at the end of the seventeenth century, were the measures to be taken when the plague appeared in a town.l Five or six days after the beginning of the quarantine, the process of purifying the houses one by one is begun. All the inhabitants are made to leave; in each room 'the furniture and goods' are raised from the ground or suspended from the air; perfume is poured around the room; after carefully sealing the windows, doors and even the keyholes with wax, the perfume is set alight. Finally, the entire house is closed while the perfume is consumed; those who have carried out the work are searched, as they were on entry, 'in the presence of the residents of the house, to see that they did not have something on their persons as they left that they did not have on entering'. Four hours later, the residents are allowed to re-enter their homes. Bentham's Panopticon Panopticon opens with a list of the benefits to be obtained from his 'inspection-house': 'Morals reformed - health preserved - industry invigorated - instruction diffused -public burthens lightened - Economy seated, as it were, upon a rock - the gordian knot of the Poor-Laws not cut, but untied - all by a simple idea in architecture!' (Bentham, 39)

46. Newswise Social And Behavioral Sciences News | New Book On Philosopher Foucault'
michel foucault is one of the best known and most widely read philosophers of our time, Anderson says. There are hundreds of books and articles about
http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/513020/
Username: Password: forgotten login how to register ABOUT NEWSWISE Overview of Services ... How to Register
Source: Purdue University Released: Fri 08-Jul-2005, 11:40 ET
Printer-friendly Version
New Book on Philosopher Foucault's Support for Radical Islamism
Libraries
Life News (Social and Behavioral Sciences) Keywords
IRAN POLITICAL RELIGIOUS MICHEL-FOUCAULT RADICAL ISLAMISM Contact Information Available for logged-in reporters only Description At a time when the United States is watching the religious and political changes in the Middle East, especially in Iran, two Purdue University professors are turning to writings published 25 years ago to develop a better understanding of radical Islamism.
STORY AND PHOTO CAN BE FOUND AT:
http://news.uns.purdue.edu/UNS/html4ever/2005/050708.Afary.Iran.html
In June, Janet Afary, an associate professor of history and women's studies, and Kevin B. Anderson, an associate professor of political science, published "Foucault and the Iranian Revolution: Gender and the Seductions of Islamism" (University of Chicago Press, $60 hardcover, $24 paperback). In the appendix, Foucault's first-hand reports on the 1979 Iranian revolution are translated, many of them for the first time. "Michel Foucault is one of the best known and most widely read philosophers of our time," Anderson says. "There are hundreds of books and articles about Foucault and his influence in areas including history, philosophy, social sciences and education. However, his reporting on the Iranian revolution is not well known because his stint as a journalist during the Iranian revolution is often ignored. Our book is really the first complete resource in English that highlights his writings about Iran."

47. The Foucault Society
The foucault Society is involved in the study and application of michel foucault s ideas within a contemporary context and is interested in engaging the
http://www.foucaultsociety.org/

Contact
Help Home About Us ... Membership
Welcome
The Foucault Society is involved in the study and application of Michel Foucault's ideas within a contemporary context.
The Society's new website is a means of engaging the broadest possible audience with the application of the works of Michel Foucault.
We invite you to participate.
"I dream of the intellectual destroyer of evidence and universalities, the one who, in the inertias and constraints of the present, locates and marks the weak points, the openings, the lines of power, who incessantly displaces himself, doesn't know exactly where he is heading nor what he'll think tomorrow because he is too attentive to the present."
Announcements
Skiathon
Foucault Society Board member skiing to the South Pole to raise funds for the Society. More Join our mailing list to receive Foucault Society updates
Click here to join our mailing list.

48. Human Nature: Justice Versus Power, Noam Chomsky Debates With Michel Foucault
Tonight s debaters are Mr. michel foucault, of the College de France, and Mr. Noam Chomsky, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
http://www.chomsky.info/debates/1971xxxx.htm
Human Nature: Justice versus Power Noam Chomsky debates with Michel Foucault ELDERS:
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the third debate of the International Philosophers' Project. Tonight's debaters are Mr. Michel Foucault, of the College de France, and Mr. Noam Chomsky, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Both philosophers have points in common and points of difference. Perhaps the best way to compare both philosophers would be to see them as tunnellers through a mountain working at opposite sides of the same mountain with different tools, without even knowing if they are working in each other's direction.
But both are doing their jobs with quite new ideas, digging as profoundly as possible with an equal commitment in philosophy as in politics: enough reasons, it seems to me for us to expect a fascinating debate about philosophy and about politics.
I intend, therefore, not to lose any time and to start off with a central, perennial question: the question of human nature.

49. "Nietzsche, Genealogy, History" Synopsis
This is a synopsis of michel foucault s essay prepared for my students in ENGL 4F70. I apologize for any errors or misrepresentations.
http://www.brocku.ca/english/courses/4F70/geneal.html
Department of English Brock University
Michel Foucault's "Nietzsche, Genealogy, History"
A synopsis This is a synopsis of Michel Foucault's essay prepared for my students in ENGL 4F70 . I apologize for any errors or misrepresentations. The pagination refers to the volume The Foucault Reader
ed. Paul Rabinow
Section 2: Why Nietzsche challenges the pursuit of origin ( Ursprung
  • The pursuit of the origins is essentialist: "because it is an attempt to capture the exact, and pure, [transhistorical, immanent] essence of things," it assumes a world of forms preexisting the world of accident and succession i.e., history... "But he who listens to history finds that things have no pre-exisiting essence, or an essence fabricated piecemeal from alien forms." (78)
    : reason was born of the fights of schoolmen
    : liberty is an invention of the middle classes
    In short, not the "inviolable identity of their origin" but disparity is at the beginning of things.
  • 'Origin' suggests a lofty beginning a before-the-Fall, therefore a realm of gods; but origins are in fact lowly, even derisive.
  • the 'origin' makes possible a field of knowledge whose end is to recover the origin, but as a thing lost, fleetingly to be glimpsed, and creating a sense that truth and truthful discourse can coincide. But history reveals 'origins' in a proliferation of errors. What truth is "is the sort of error that cannot be refuted because it has hardened into an unalterable form in the long baking process of history." (79 ft)
  • 50. ...:::Espaço Michel Foucault:::...
    Translate this page Página dedicada a estudos em michel foucault. Artigos acadêmicos, comentários, links e textos traduzidos.
    http://www.unb.br/fe/tef/filoesco/foucault/

    51. Michel Foucault Buffali 1971, Paris 1975. Four Photographs
    Photo of michel foucault, 1975, by Bruce Jackson. Photo of michel foucault, michel foucault. Buffalo. 413-71. Photo by Bruce Jackson. michel foucault.
    http://buffaloreport.com/2004/040409.jackson.foucault.html
    9 April 2004 Buffalo Report home page
    Bruce Jackson Michel Foucault: Buffalo 1971, Paris 1975. Four photographs. I: 285 rue de Vaugirard, Paris, 1975 II: at the ruins of columns from an old bank, University at Buffalo, 1971 Buffalo Report home page

    52. The History Of Sexuality
    michel foucault s The History of Sexuality pioneered queer theory. In it he builds an argument grounded in a historical analysis of the word sexuality
    http://www.ipce.info/ipceweb/Library/history_of_sexuality.htm
    [Doc. List E6] [Newsletter E8]
    The History of Sexuality – About Foucault
    Author unknown Michel Foucault's "The History of Sexuality" pioneered queer theory. In it he builds an argument grounded in a historical analysis of the word "sexuality" against the common thesis that sexuality always has been repressed in Western society. Quite the contrary: since the 17th century, there has been a fixation with sexuality creating a discourse around sexuality. It is this discourse that has created sexual minorities. This page only covers the views he presents in "The History of Sexuality". In "The History of Sexuality", Foucault attempts to disprove the thesis that Western society has seen a repression of sexuality since the 17th century and that sexuality has been unmentionable, something impossible to speak about. In the 70s, when the book was written, the sexual revolution was a fact. The ideas of the psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich, saying that to conserve your mental health you needed to liberate your sexual energy, were popular. The past was seen as a dark age where sexuality had been something forbidden. Foucault, on the other hand, states that Western culture has long been fixated on sexuality. We call it a repression. Rather, the social convention, not to mention sexuality, has created a discourse around it, thereby making sexuality ubiquitous. This would not have been the case, had it been thought of as something quite natural. The concept "sexuality" itself is a result of this discourse. And the interdictions also have constructive power: they have created sexual identities and a multiplicity of sexualities that would not have existed otherwise.

    53. FQS 8(2) From Michel Foucault's Theory Of Discourse To Empirical Discourse Resea
    From michel foucault s Theory of Discourse to Empirical Discourse Research. Current Methodological Trends and Practices in Social Research. Edited by
    http://www.qualitative-research.net/fqs/fqs-e/inhalt2-07-e.htm
    From Michel Foucault's Theory of Discourse to Empirical Discourse Research. Current Methodological Trends and Practices in Social Research
    Edited by
    Editorial FQS 8(2): From Michel Foucault's Theory of Discourse to Empirical Discourse Research Full text:
    English

    German

    Spanish
    The Field of Foucaultian Discourse Analysis: Structures, Developments and Perspectives Full text:
    English

    Spanish
    Abstract:
    German
    Beyond Discourse: A Genealogical Analysis of an Intersubjective Transformation Process of Gender Patricia Amigot Leache (Spain) Full text:
    Spanish
    Abstract:
    English

    German
    How to Read Space: Methods for a Spatial Analysis in Discourse Research Sybille Bauriedl (Germany) Full text:
    German
    Abstract: English Spanish More Than Just a Discursive Practice? Conceptual Principles and Methodological Aspects of Dispositif Analysis Full text: German Abstract: English Spanish French Epistemology and its Revisions: Towards a Reconstruction of the Methodological Position of Foucaultian Discourse Analysis Rainer Diaz-Bone (Germany) Full text: German Abstract: English Spanish Proposals for the Operationalisation of the Discourse Theory of Laclau and Mouffe Using a Triangulation of Lexicometrical and Interpretative Methods Georg Glasze (Germany) Full text: German Abstract: English Spanish Full text: English Abstract: German Spanish The Analysis of Discourses Which Form a Part of the Regime of Practices of Governing: A Governmentality Studies Approach Victoria Haidar (Argentina) Full text: Spanish Abstract: English German Pêcheux's Contribution to Discourse Analysis

    54. Michel Foucault Reading Group - Wikiversity
    From the Wikipedia article michel foucault (IPA pronunciation mi el fuko; Englishspeakers pronunciation varies) (October 15, 1926 – June 25,
    http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Michel_Foucault_reading_group
    Michel Foucault reading group
    From Wikiversity
    Jump to: navigation search
    Contents
    edit Goals
    This project aims to gather an interested group of individuals who will read and discuss texts by Michel Foucault.
    edit Background
    From the Wikipedia article Michel Foucault (IPA pronunciation: [miʃel fuko]; English-speakers' pronunciation varies) (October 15, 1926 – June 25, 1984) was a French philosopher. He held a chair at the Coll¨ge de France, which he gave the title "The History of Systems of Thought." His writings have had an enormous impact: Foucault's influence extends across the humanities and social sciences and into applied and professional areas of study. Foucault is known for his critical studies of various social institutions, most notably psychiatry, medicine, parameters of educational timeframes, and the prison system, and also for his work on the history of sexuality. His work concerning power and the relation between power and knowledge, as well as his ideas concerning "discourse" in relation to the history of Western thought, have been widely discussed and applied. His work is often described as postmodernist or post-structuralist by commentators and critics; during the 1960s, however, he was more often associated with the structuralist movement. Although he was initially happy with this description, he later emphasized his distance from the structuralist approach, and he always unequivocally rejected the 'post-structuralist' and 'postmodernist' labels.

    55. Foucauldian Reflections
    1) michel foucault Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics . (six lectures given by michel foucault at the University of California at Berkeley, OctNov.
    http://foucauldians.blogspot.com/
    @import url("http://www.blogger.com/css/blog_controls.css"); @import url("http://www.blogger.com/dyn-css/authorization.css?targetBlogID=8259954"); var BL_backlinkURL = "http://www.blogger.com/dyn-js/backlink_count.js";var BL_blogId = "8259954";
    Foucauldian Reflections
    Foucault related ramblings and thoughts.
    Wednesday, January 23, 2008
    Two different conceptions of submission
    In the Hebrew conception, God being a shepherd, the flock following him complies to his will, to his law. Christianity, on the other hand, conceived the shepherd-sheep relationship as one of individual and complete dependence. This is undoubtedly one of the points at which Christian pastorship radically diverged from Greek thought. If a Greek had to obey, he did so because it was the law, or the will of the city. If he did happen to follow the will of someone in particular (a physician, an orator, a pedagogue), then that person had rationally persuaded him to do so. And it had to be for a strictly determined aim: to be cured, to acquire a skill, to make the best choice. In Christianity, the tie with the shepherd is an individual one. It is personal submission to him. His will is done, not because it is consistent with the law, and not just as far as it is consistent with it, but, principally, because it is his will
    Michel Foucault, Omnes et Singulatim: Towards a Criticism of Political Reason

    56. Michel Foucault (1926 - 1984)
    michel foucault (1926 1984). by Jane Louis-Wood. (foucault is pronounced foo-coh, if you are concerned with impressing your mates)
    http://www.cf.ac.uk/socsi/undergraduate/introsoc/mf1.html
    Michel Foucault (1926 - 1984) by Jane Louis-Wood (Foucault is pronounced foo-coh, if you are concerned with impressing your mates) Foucault has been lauded as one of the foremost thinkers of the twentieth century. His work, a radical fusion of historical and philosophical investigation that confounds the claims of both disciplines to provide a rational, evolutionary framework for the human story, is passionately debated in his native France and has been revered - and reconfigured - by the humanities faculties of the principal American universities. Born in Poitiers and educated at the prestigious and fiercely competitive ENS (Ecole Normale Superieure) in Paris, his earlier works draw on the Hegelian tradition which dominated the intellectual climate of post-war France. From that tradition Foucault retains two key elements: the impulse to theorise and problematise the relationship between general history and the history of ideas, and a preoccupation with the human subject - how individuals are constituted as knowing, knowable and self-knowing beings. However, he clearly rejects from the same tradition the notion that history is a total process with a coherent overall meaning and progressive linear direction, and that the human subject can be effectively mapped by discrete or definitive sciences. "I wondered how it was that knowledge could have arisen, changed, developed and offered scientific theory new fields of observations and objects, and how scientific learning had been imported into it."

    57. The Rhetoric Of Michel Foucault
    This site is focused primarily upon power, feminism, sexuality, identity, and knowledge within the writings of French Philosopher michel foucault.
    http://www.mnstate.edu/borchers/Teaching/Rhetoric/RhetoricWeb/Foucault/foucault.
    The Rhetoric of Michel Foucault I. Introduction II. Power and Knowledge III. Sexuality and The History of Sex IV. Feminist Possibilities with Foucault ... VI. List of Sources I. Introduction Back to Top of Page Return to RhetoricWeb Home page

    58. What Are The Iranians Dreaming About? By Michel Foucault
    Newspaper article by foucault originally published in October 1978. From the appendix to foucault and the Iranian Revolution Gender and the Seductions of
    http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/007863.html
    The Reckless Mind: Intellectuals in Politics Library Journal BOOKFORUM Reading Lolita in Tehran
    An excerpt from
    Foucault and the Iranian Revolution
    Gender and the Seductions of Islamism
    Janet Afary and Kevin B. Anderson
    What Are the Iranians Dreaming About? Michel Foucault "They will never let go of us of their own will. No more than they did in Vietnam." I wanted to respond that they are even less ready to let go of you than Vietnam because of oil, because of the Middle East. Today they seem ready, after Camp David, to concede Lebanon to Syrian domination and therefore to Soviet influence, but would the United States be ready to deprive itself of a position that, according to circumstance, would allow them to intervene from the East or to monitor the peace? Will the Americans push the shah toward a new trial of strength, a second "Black Friday"? The recommencement of classes at the university, the recent strikes, the disturbances that are beginning once again, and next month's religious festivals, could create such an opportunity. The man with the iron hand is Moghadam, the current leader of the SAVAK. This is the backup plan, which for the moment is neither the most desirable nor the most likely. It would be uncertain: While some generals could be counted on, it is not clear if the army could be. From a certain point of view, it would be useless, for there is no "communist threat": not from outside, since it has been agreed for the past twenty-five years that the USSR would not lay a hand on Iran; not from inside, because hatred for the Americans is equaled only by fear of the Soviets.

    59. Foucault : Gaston Bachelard - Archives Pour Tous
    Translate this page michel foucault, professeur au Collège de France, donne une belle définition de la vision très personnelle de la culture du philosophe Gaston Bachelard.
    http://www.ina.fr/archivespourtous/index.php?vue=notice&id_notice=I00002886

    60. Haber's Art Reviews: Who Is Michel Foucault?
    A primer to michel foucault, from reviews by John Haber of New York City art galleries and museums.
    http://www.haberarts.com/foucault.htm
    Who Is Michel Foucault?
    John Haber
    in New York City
    A Primer for Pre-Post-Structuralists
    What helped me most to think about Michel Foucault was a query that I myself had. I knew that people often associate artistic creativity with madness, and I wondered if the idea had a history. I was referred to R. Wittkower's fine book, Under the Sign of Saturn The Artist (with the ostentatious capitals) it helped to create. I was looking for the cultural history of an idea, discovering that my needs had long been surprisingly neglected. Philosophers of the past tended to take concepts as a given, waiting to be applied to burst the veil of everyday lives. Philosophers of the present had tried to analyze ideas, but history seemed unnecessary baggage on top of right and wrong. Historians had little truck with ideas as artifacts amid the stream of important events. Yet the history of ideas matters to an understanding of events, and that was precisely the field that Foucault nurtured.
    Geneologies
    He said he was pursuing the "genealogy" of an idea, and he might be said to have given a founding push to the hot trend of "cultural studies" or "the New Historicism" in literary criticism. He is closely paralleled by the British-born historian Stephen Toulmin, who placed Newton and Descartes in context of half-forgotten political turmoil. However, he did not really match what Americans had called philosophy sociology , or history before him.

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