+
From: "M. Karskens" <mkarskens@xxxxxxxxxx>
+
Date: Fri, 24 Oct 2008 12:06:21 +0200
The most close to <genealogy of power> comes the
January 7 1976 lecture: "l'enjeu de toutes cettes
généalogies, ... est celui ci: qu'est-ce que ce
pouvoir " (French edition p.13 below; I think
this will be p.12 of the Englis translation):
the second place is mentioned by you, it is the
interview with Trombadori of June 1976: "ed il
ricorso ad analisi che si farebbero in termini di
genealogie, di rapporti di forza, di sviluppi
strategici, di tattitiche" see, Microfisica del
Potere p.8 = Dits et Ecrits III page 145
yours
machiel karskens
At 09:34 24-10-2008, Kevin Turner wrote:
Hi Clare, and thanks for the references. Having
scanned through them very quickly, I was
reasonably surprised to come across no instances
of the phrase "genealogy of power." The closest
Foucault come to saying this is in 'Truth and
Power' where he refers to â??the genealogy of
relations of forceâ?? (P/K: 114; EW3: 116). What
is interesting is that I have found many more
instances in which Foucault talks about doing a
"genealogy of knowledge (connaissance)," which
would be the "indispensable other side" to the
"archaeology of knowledge (savoir): see, for
example, "Psychiatric Power:" 238ff, 346;
"Society Must Be Defended:" 8-12; and in "Penal
Theories and Institutions," which has yet to be
translated into English, Foucault makes a
distinction between what he calls "an
archaeology of knowledge" and a "dynastics of
knowledge," cf. PP: 256n13; see also, EW1:
17ff). What's even more interesting is that I
think I have only come across one instance in
which a "genealogy of connaissance" is discussed
in the secondary literature. I cannot remember
the exact reference, but I think it was
something written by Stuart Elden. If anyone
knows of other instances of this, could I please
have references. Regards, Kevin. > -----Original
Message----- > From: c.ofarrell@xxxxxxxxxx >
Sent: Fri, 24 Oct 2008 08:43:37 +1000 > To:
foucault-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re:
[Foucault-L] genealogy of power > > Kevin > > I
don't have my books with me but try The Order of
Discourse, 'Truth > and power' and 'Two
lectures'. If Foucault does use the term these >
are the most likely places. > > You raise a
useful point about secondary commentary
inventing terms > which then get attributed to
the primary source and the necessity to >
carefully check. I won't even begin to mention
the problems of > translation... > > At 10:48 AM
-0800 23/10/08, Kevin Turner wrote: > >I cannot
find this phrase in the text you mention - do
you have a > >reference to the page on which
Foucault uses "genealogy of power"? >> > >The
reason I am asking the question is that I don't
remember ever > >reading this phrase in any of
Foucault's texts, and so I'm
wondering > >whether is actually a product of
secondary commentary which,
through > >reiteration, has somehow become
attributed to Foucault himself. > > -- >
regards > Clare >
************************************************
> Clare O'Farrell > email:
c.ofarrell@xxxxxxxxxx > website:
http://www.michel-foucault.com >
************************************************
>
_______________________________________________ >
Foucault-L mailing list
_______________________________________________ Foucault-L mailing list
Prof. Machiel Karskens
social and political philosophy
Faculty of Philosophy
Radboud University Nijmegen - The Netherlands