Re: [Foucault-L] Ph.d. course on Foucault, Governmentality, Biopolitics. 11-13 Dec., Copenhagen

Hi Michael
Thank for your interest in the course. I shall be happy to send you the readings - if you're not able to download them through your library. On Mitchell's site at Academia you'll find a lot of his writings available as downloads and a lecture which I think he'll give at the course. Hope this is helpful and please circulate the call to relevant colleagues, thank you.
Best, Kaspar

--------------------------------------------
On Thu, 9/12/13, Michael Blix <michael.jblix@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Subject: Re: [Foucault-L] Ph.d. course on Foucault, Governmentality, Biopolitics. 11-13 Dec., Copenhagen
To: "Mailing-list" <foucault-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Thursday, September 12, 2013, 10:34 PM

Hi Kaspar,

My name is Michael Blix. I'm a PhD student at the University
of
Wisconsin-Madison. Unfortunately I will not be able to
attend this course,
however it is very pertinent to a line of research that I'm
pursuing. Will
any of the content be put online after the course is
finished?

Thank you,
Michael


On Wed, Sep 11, 2013 at 4:46 PM, Kaspar Villadsen <k_villadsen@xxxxxxxxx>wrote:

> Dear Foucault-list,
> Please see this call for the Ph.d. Course:
>
>
> Foucault, Governmentality,
> Biopolitics – Analytical strategies for critique of
power (Ph.d. course,
> 11-13
> December 2013): http://www.cbs.dk/en/node/258118
> Faculty:
> ·  Jeffrey
> Bussolini, Associate Professor, Staten Island, City
University of New York,
> USA.
> ·  Mitchell
> Dean, Professor of Public Governance, CBS/University of
Newcastle,
> Denmark/Australia,
> ·  Thomas
> Dumm, Professor, Department of Political Science,
Amherst College, USA.
> ·  Marius
> Gudmand-Høyer, Post.Doc, Dept. of Management, Politics
& Philosophy, CBS,
> Denmark.
> ·  Kaspar
> Villadsen, Associate Professor, Dept. of Management,
Politics &
> Philosophy, CBS, Denmark.
> Place: Department of
> Management, Politics & Philosophy, CBS, Copenhagen
> Course Coordinators
> Kaspar
> Villadsen & Mitchell Dean
>
> Prerequisite/progression of the course
> Only
> PhD students can participate in the course.
>
> It is a precondition for receiving the course diploma
> that the PhD student attends the whole course.
>
> Aim of the course
> The
> course will provide the participants with:
>
> a)
> An updated introduction to key analytical concepts in
the Governmentality
> literature, and the potentials and weaknesses of these
concepts will be
> discussed.
>
> b)
> Possibilities for supplementing the governmentality
approach with other
> analytical sources will be discussed.
>
> c)
> Furthermore, a detailed consideration of the current
status of
> governmentality
> studies and post-Foucauldian studies will be given, in
particular in light
> of
> recent claims for a crisis of critique.
>
> d)
> Finally, suggestions will be presented on how to
elaborate or move beyond
> the
> framework of governmentality by activating concepts of
bio-power and
> sovereignty, reconsidering the social and notions of
society, and focusing
> on
> international dimensions of governmentality.
>
> In
> brief, the course aims to provide participants with a
thorough
> understanding of
> the governmentality framework, that is, its analytical
possibilities, its
> current status, and its possible directions of
development.
>
> Course content, structure and teaching
> Over
> the last 20 years, post-Foucauldian “governmentality
studies” have come to
> growing prominence. These studies have been effective
in critically
> analyzing
> new types of liberal government, in particular by
demonstrating ‘the active
> side of laissez faire’. They describe how the motto
of ‘pulling back the
> state’
> has been accompanied by a series of governmental
strategies and
> technologies
> aimed at shaping institutions and subjects in
particular ways. Perhaps
> most noticeably,
> they have presented a diagnosis of a proliferation of
regimes of
> enterprise and
> accounting in new and surprising places. But a wide
range of other domains
> have
> been subjected to governmentality analysis spanning
from genetic screening
> and
> risk calculation, new crime prevention strategies, to
health promotion by
> self-responsibilization. To be sure, the concepts in
governmentality
> studies
> continue to constitute effective tools for critical
social analysis.
>
> Nevertheless,
> in recent years critical objections have been raised
against the
> governmentality approach. It has been noted by some
observers that the
> Foucauldian and post-structuralist language, originally
used for critical
> academic purposes, seems to be increasingly
appropriated by ‘the powers’
> that
> were the object of such critique. Most notably, this
point has been voiced
> (although in different versions) by Zizek, Boltanski,
and Hardt & Negri.
> These thinkers suggest that a post-structural
’politics of difference’
> increasingly seems to be an integral part of the ways,
in which
> institutions
> and companies organize themselves. If modern liberal
government has begun
> to
> speak for the dissolution of binary essentials, the
destabilization of
> rigid
> power structures, the creation of space for the
subject’s self-transforming
> work upon itself, and so on. In light of this
development, we need to
> think of
> ways to revitalize the Foucauldian concepts of
critique/criticism or to
> push a
> critical perspective beyond Foucault.
>
> A
> central theme of the PhD course is the search for
effective analytical
> strategies for critique of power (some perhaps less
noticed) in the works
> of
> Foucault and other writers within and outside the
governmentality
> tradition. Of
> particular interest is Giorgio Agamben’s recent
critique and extension of
> Foucault’s genealogy of government.
>
> The
> course requires the submission of a paper that deals
with conceptual
> problems
> or analytical designs in relation to Foucauldian
inspired/governmentality
> studies. Furthermore, papers that apply Foucauldian
concepts to empirical
> problems in a variety of domains are welcomed.
>
> It
> is also possible to participate on the basis of an
abstract stating the
> theme
> of the PhD project. An abstract should be approximately
1 page, whereas a
> paper
> should be approx. 5 pages. In both cases, the PhD
student should state his
> main
> analytical challenge/concern at his/her current stage
in the project.
>
> Papers/abstracts
> must be in English. DEADLINE is 2 December 2013.
>
> Lecture plan
> Time/period    Faculty    Title
> Wednesday 11th
> December.
> 10:00-12:30     Kaspar
Villadsen    Analytical approaches in
> governmentality studies
> 12:30-13:30     Lunch
> 13:30-16:00     Mitchell Dean 
   Concepts of power:
> ‘The signature of power’‘
> 16:00-17:00    Kaspar Villadsen &
Mitchell Dean    Papers from Ph.D.
> scholars
>
> Thursday 12th December.
> 10.00-12.30    Thomas Dumm  Foucault,
Neo-liberalism and Freedom.
> 12:30-13:30     Lunch
> 13.30-15.00    Kaspar Villadsen   
Technologies and organisations in
> Foucault’s thinking
>
> 15.00-17.00    Kaspar Villadsen, Thomas Dumm
& Mitchell Dean    Papers
> from Ph.D. scholars
>
> Friday 13thDecember
> 10:00-11:30     Jeffrey
Bussolini    Biopolitics: Foucault meets Agamben
> 11:00-12:30     Mitchell Dean
> Governmentality meets theology
> 12.30-13.30    Lunch
> 13:30-15:00     Marius
Gudmand-Høyer     Dispositive analysis:
the key
> concept in Foucault?
> 15.00-16.00    Kaspar Villadsen, Jeffrey
Bussolini & Mitchell Dean
> Papers from Ph.D. scholars
> 16:00-17:00    Kaspar Villadsen &
Mitchell Dean
> Concluding discussion and evaluation
>
>
>
>
> Teaching methods
> The
> course will use lectures given by specialists in the
field, roundtable
> discussions, and presentation of papers from PhD
students. Participation
> in the
> course requires a paper with an outline of PhD project
or parts of the
> project.
> See more details above.
>
>
> Course literature
>
> Agamben, G. (2011) The Kingdom and the Glory: a
> Theological Genealogy of Economy and Government.
Stanford University Press,
> especially pages 109-114; Appendix.
> Bussolini, J. (2010) ‘Critical encounter between
Giorgio Agamben
> and Michel Foucault: Review of recent works by Giorgio
Agamben’, Foucault
> Studies 10: 108-143.
> Dean, M. (2012) ‘Governmentality meets theology: the
king reigns
> but does not govern’, Theory, Culture and Society 29
(3):
> 145-58.
> Dean, M. (2012) ‘The signature of power’, Journal
of
> Political Power 5 (1): 101-117.
> Foucault, M. (2007) Security, Territory, Population.
> New York: Palgrave Macmillan (especially lecture 5)
> Foucault, M. (2008) The Birth of Biopolitics. New
> York: Palgrave Macmillan (especially lecture 12).
> Villadsen, K. & Karlsen, M.P. (2008) "Who Should Do
the
> Talking? The proliferation of dialogue as governmental
technology",
> in: Culture & Organization, no. 14, vol. 4.
>  Villadsen, K. (2008) "Doing without the State
and
> Civil Society as Universals: 'Dispositifs' of care
across the classic
> sector divide",
> in: Journal of Civil Society, no. 4, vol. 3.
>
> ECTS awarded
> 3 ECTS
>
> Language
> English
>
> Maximum and Minimum number of
> participants
> Min: 19
> Max:
>
> Fee
> DKK 3,900 (covers the course, coffee, tea, lunch and
> one dinner)
>
> Enrol no later than
> 1 November 2013
> Contact: See Link: http://www.cbs.dk/en/node/258118
> _______________________________________________
> Foucault-L mailing list
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Re: [Foucault-L] Ph.d. course on Foucault, Governmentality, Biopolitics. 11-13 Dec., Copenhagen, Michael Blix
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