Re: [Foucault-L] contre-pouvoir

As you say, Foucault uses the expresion just a few times. To know a
little more about what he means you should take a look to Collège de
France courses, 1974-1975.

2006/5/21, Daniel Bird <aeyydwb@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
Hi,

I'm not sure if the phrase 'contre-pouvoir' is used, but 'The Subject and
Power' in Dreyfus and Rabinow's Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and
Hermeneutics talks about how power always acts on power, rather than acting
on any a priori body. I would be able to find exact quotations but
unfortunately I'm away this weekend without any books. There's also an
article by John Muckelbauer about resistance which you might find quite
useful, but again I can't find the reference right now. Let me know if you
want me to look it up.

Best,

Dan

>>> mgekelly@xxxxxxxxx 05/19/06 4:32 PM >>>
Hi there,

the phrase contre-pouvoir/counter-power crops up a lot in Foucauldian
works, but I've only found about five instances of it in Foucault's
own writing, and none of those make it particularly clear what he
takes the phrase to mean or how it segues with more defined concepts
in his vocabulary, notably power and resistance. Anyone got anything
on this?

Best,
Mark
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  • Re: [Foucault-L] contre-pouvoir
    • From: Mark Kelly
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    Re: [Foucault-L] contre-pouvoir, Daniel Bird
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