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Philosophical mentor of the ÂŽ60s, controversial on the French cultural scene, Michel Foucault was philosopher, historian, essayist, psychologist, professor in France and Tunis. His numerous volumes [âFolie et dĂ©raison. Histoire de la folie Ă l'Ăąge classiqueâ (1961), âNaissance de la clinique.
Une archĂ©ologie du rĂ©gard mĂ©dicalâ (1963), âLes Mots et les choses. Une archĂ©ologie des sciences humainesâ(1966), âL'ArchĂ©ologie du savoirâ (1969), âRaymond Rousselâ (1962), âHommage Ă Georges Batailleâ (1963), âLanguage to Infinityâ (1963), âLa pensĂ©e du dehorsâ (1966), âL'Ordre du Discours (1971)â, âSurveiller et punir. Naissance de la prisonâ (1975), âLa VolontĂ© de savoir. Vol. I of Histoire de la sexualitĂ©â (1976), âL'Usage des plaisirs. Vol. II of Histoire de la sexualitĂ©â (1984), âLe Souci de soi. Vol. III of Histoire de la sexualitĂ©â (1984)], the academic and civic work, media debates imposed him as a new school of thought classic in France â quite paradoxical this canonization since Foucaultâs ideas appear controversial, really subversive here and there. Influenced by Nietzsche and Heidegger, Marx and Freud, he explored the shifty schemes of power in society contending time and history alter mankindâs basic truths. His work attempts to re-locate events in new perspectives sustained by erudite research, exceptional descriptive talent and original interpretation. He reunites historical ideas and hypotheses in a literary manner with artistic touches, re-discussing the traditional perspective on History in identifying discontinuity elements that allow or impose the transition from one era to another. The foremost concept of his studies on history is âthe archaeology of knowledgeâ, contending that present civilization is the result of summing up successive ages differing not only in men and events but in thinking manner, in episteme as well. To an innocent reader the titles and subtitles in Foucaultâs bibliography are real pitfalls. âHistoire de la folieâ is not really a history of madness, though it uses tons of historical data and many original documents, because the author considers madness not a coherently induced condition, but a process, a function. Likewise, âSurveiller et punir. Naissance de la prisonâ is not a history of how prison appeared as the subtitle indicates, but a book on power. Foucault presents a less indulgent view on power that is not simply negative, though cruel, abhorrent and repressive; power is continually produced and fed by human need. The difficulty of identifying Foucaultâs subjects is due to his lack of belief in anthropological constants, in a general theory on history and mostly to his complex, idiosyncratic and autarchic discourse many times approachable by some initiates alone. Reading Foucault reveals subtle irony, playful frame of mind apparently shaky and frequently skeptical. Many passages in his books, but chiefly interviews and articles offer bits of self-portrayal, Foucault admitting intersections with science historians and the ÂŽ50sâ anti-psychiatric trend. Involved in social issues, heâs to be found among the promoters of a generalized contesting movement shaking France in 1968. Following detailed investigation in hospitals, asylums and prisons, he brings up again the enforcement of human rights in confining institutions. He takes active part in fighting for the removal of such structures that embody, in a concentrated manner, the strategies of social surveillance and domination stage-managing the society. He gets deeply involved in the issue of modern state and power claiming that a limited number of leaders initiated in universal ruling taboos can align all the disciplines of knowledge to their objectives thus contributing to the individualâs enslaving and colonization. In mid ÂŽ70s Foucault is mostly interested in the history of sexuality, announcing a series of 5 books that was never finalized and that should have dealt with sexuality in modern times. Still, he published 2 volumes in the ÂŽ80s: âL'Usage des plaisirsâ and âLe Souci de soiâ on sexuality being contended by ancient Greeks and Romans. He declares heâs gay, unwilling to be considered a gay thinker though he gets involved with Gai-Pied during his last years. He acknowledges there is love in gay and lesbian couples, influencing the appearance of a âsocial constructionâ program that will impose a new approach, considering human beings and their sexuality are products of the spirit and time they live in. He brings up the oppression model once more, claiming sexual minorities appeared as the result of negative social pressure. He dismisses the idea of trans-historical homosexuality â a model sort of stable that would impose a social typology out of time. He dies in June 1984, another AIDS victim, not before declaring in a final interview: âThe quest for some form of morality universally acceptable (âŠ) seems a catastrophe to meâ. |
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