"Michel Foucault" Essays and Research Papers

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    DISCIPLINE DISCIPLINE AD PUNISH- MICHEAL FOUCAULT The chapter on discipline begins with the seventeenth century image of the soldier. A soldier bore certain natural signs of strength and courage and marks of his pride and honor. These were characteristics which were already inherent in a soldier. By the late eighteenth century‚ a soldier became someone or rather something that can be made‚ like a required machine which can be constructed. The Classical Age discovered the body as a target and

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    Modern State

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    1.What does the modern state do? What are the salient features of the modern state? a. intrusive and regulative i. restricts individual freedom ii. control all citizens lives everywhere iii. the state is an omnipresent busy body b. extractive c. coercive i. monopoly over mens of violence ii. coerce us into willing/ unwilling means ALL THE STATES HAVE THESE FEATURES. THE DIFFERENCE IS ONE OF DEGREE RATHER THAN KIND. 2. How has the modern state appeared and evolved

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    Critically discuss Foucault’s notion of power and knowledge? Michel Foucault is the one of the first contemporary social theorists. Born in France‚ he was‚ like most sociologists of his time‚ involved when students heavily revolted against the people in power in May 1968.He was not only a sociologist‚ but also worked in a range of fields: history‚ philosophy and psychology. His key works include Madness and Civilisation (1961)‚ The Order of Things (1966)‚ Discipline and Punishment (1975) and

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    with radical philosophers during his time as a student in school and later on began working as a Professor at the University of Toulouse in 1936. Canguilhem’s thinking inspired many other famous philosophers that are well known today‚ including Michel Foucault. Although he was obviously an important figure‚ he is not as well known as those he has inspired. Canguilhem wrote a book titled “The Normal and the Pathological.” This book is divided into two parts‚ the first debuted in 1966 and the second in

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    particular usage. (Gibbins & Reimer‚ 1996‚ p. 8) As such‚ the meaning of “post” in this paper refers a “break from”‚ “opposition to”‚ “difference to and from” and a response to”. Works of Karl Marx and John Stuart Mill; Friedrich Nietzsche and Michel Foucault will prove that there is break between Modernity and Postmodernity. Modernity Modernity refers to a way of life and state of mind that experience progressive economic and administrative rationalization on which this processes brought

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    Panopticism

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    cells‚ each of which extends the whole width of the building; they have two windows‚ one on the inside‚ corresponding to the windows of the tower; the other‚ on the outside‚ allows the light to cross the cell from one end to the other.” (Foucault‚ 285) Foucault talks about the meaning of Panopticism‚ and how it works in our society. In fact‚ our toady’s world is even more panoptic than ever. In the first beginning of Foucault’s text‚ he explains what Panopticism is. He explains Bentham’s prison

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    Epistomological Revolution

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    Granada‚ Danko E. 11046309 GREATWK EA2 Dr. Max Felicilda; Dr. Ernesto Villacorta; Dr. Francisco Guevara Retracing Steps Synthesis Paper for Great Works To begin this essay‚ I first would like to discuss the problem I am to tackle with my synthesis of the three disciplines enlighteningly lectured to me during the course of GREATWK. Growing up as a child‚ ignorant was I of the great events that would and had occurred in the country of my birth‚ the Philippines. Little did I know of the problems

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    Frame Analysis

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    Question 2B – Essay Plan. Foucault‚ Rubin and Butler. Foucault and discourse. • Michael Foucault (926-84)‚ philosopher‚ historian and activist was one of the most influential of thinkers whose work is generally categorised as poststructuralist. • Foucault was a gay man who died of AIDS in 198‚ after his death his life and work were subject to a series of attacks which claiming to seek the ‘truth’ of Foucault work. • His work and life‚ achievements and demonization’s‚ have made him a powerful

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    Superstitions and India

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    The Power of Superstition in Public Life in India Why are superstitions a part of public life in India? The modern mechanisms for risk-management or “disciplines” ranging from statistics to modern medicine exist side-by-side with superstitions in the country. The answer to why these disciplines have not penetrated into the pores of Indian society lies in the history of political power in India. It is difficult to use the word “superstition” without imagining quotation marks around it. For‚

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    In‚ Life That Does Not Deserve to Live‚ Giorgio Agamben aims to expand on Michel Foucault’s concepts of ‘biopower’ and ‘biopolitics’‚ to express the way in which the state has power over society in the way that ‘bare life’ is produced. He uses the Latin term homo sacer – literally translated to ‘sacred man’ – to describe a life which can be “eliminated without punishment” ‚ one that possesses no value to the state and therefore can be terminated without the act being considered a crime. Examples

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