$23.95 – Paperback book / Pantheon / ISBN:9780394739540
Power/ Knowledge: Selected Interviews & Other Writings 1972 - 1977
Michel Foucault has become famous for a series of books that
have permanently altered our understanding of many institutions of
Western society. He analyzed mental institutions in the remarkable
Madness and Civilization; hospitals in The Birth of
the Clinic; prisons in Discipline and Punish; and
schools and families in The History of Sexuality.
But the general reader as well as the specialist is apt to miss the
consistent purposes that lay behind these difficult individual
studies, thus losing sight of the broad social vision and political
aims that unified them. Now, in this superb set of essays and
interviews, Foucault has provided a much-needed guide to Foucault.
These pieces, ranging over the entire spectrum of his concerns,
enabled Foucault, in his most intimate and accessible voice, to
interpret the conclusions of his research in each area and to
demonstrate the contribution of each to the magnificent -- and
terrifying -- portrait of society that he was patiently compiling.
For, as Foucault shows, what he was always describing was the
nature of power in society; not the conventional treatment of power
that concentrates on powerful individuals and repressive
institutions, but the much more pervasive and insidious mechanisms
by which power " reaches into the very grain of individuals,
touches their bodies and inserts itself into their actions and
attitudes, their discourses, learning processes and everyday lives"
Foucault's investigations of prisons, schools, barracks, hospitals,
factories, cities, lodgings, families, and other organized forms of
social life are each a segment of one of the most astonishing
intellectual enterprises of all time -- and, as thisbook proves,
one which possesses profound implications for understanding the
social control of our bodies and our minds.