Subjects of truth: Resisting governmentality in Foucault’s 1980s (Record no. 11773)

MARC details
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fixed length control field 01969nab a22002417a 4500
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control field 20210622114946.0
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100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Legg, Stephen
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Title Subjects of truth: Resisting governmentality in Foucault’s 1980s
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Name of publisher, distributor, etc Sage,
Date of publication, distribution, etc 2019.
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Pages Vol 37, Issue 1, 2019 (27-45p.)
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Subject Foucault,
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Subject governmentality,
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Subject truth,
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Subject parrhesia,
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Subject resistance
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Host Biblionumber 8875
Host Itemnumber 15874
Place, publisher, and date of publication London Pion Ltd. 2010
Title Environment and planning D:
International Standard Serial Number 1472-3433
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Uniform Resource Identifier https://doi.org/10.1177/0263775818801957
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Koha item type Articles
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-- 46612
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-- Responding to ongoing concerns that Michel Foucault’s influential governmentality analytics fail to enable the study of ‘resistance’, this paper analyses his last two lecture courses on ‘parrhesia’ (risky and courageous speech). While Foucault resisted resistance as an analytical category, he increasingly pointed us towards militant, alternative and insolent forms of counter-conduct. The paper comparatively analyses Foucault’s reading of Plato, Socrates and the Cynics, exploring parrhesia’s episteme (its truth–knowledge relations), techne (its practice and geographies), identities (its souls and its bodies) and its possible relations to the present. It concludes that Foucault viewed resistance as power; power which problematised governmentalities but could also be analysed as a governmentality itself. In pursuing parrhesia, Foucault reaffirmed his commitment to studying discourse as always emplaced and enacted, while sketching out the geographies (from the royal court and the democratic Assembly to the public square and the street) that staged the risk of truth-talking. This suggests new subjects and spaces to open up political possibilities when exploring the geographies of governmentalities.
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-- 46448
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-- 43973
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-- 46614
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-- 46615
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