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  1. Edward McGushin: Foucault’s Askesis: An Introduction to the Philosophical Life: Northwestern University Press, Evanston, IL, 2007, 380 pp, ISBN 0810122820, US$ 89.95 , ISBN 0810122839, US$ 29.95. [REVIEW]Corey McCall - 2010 - Continental Philosophy Review 42 (4):577-582.
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  • Making sense: The work of Eugene Gendlin. [REVIEW]David Michael Levin - 1994 - Human Studies 17 (3):343 - 353.
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  • The limits of individuation, or how to distinguish Deleuze and Foucault.Peter Hallward - 2000 - Angelaki 5 (2):93 – 111.
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  • (1 other version)Truth, power and pedagogy: Michel Foucault on the rise of the disciplines.Roger Deacon - 2002 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 34 (4):435–458.
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  • (1 other version)The revenge of the gay nihilist.Ladelle McWhorter - 2001 - Hypatia 16 (3):115-125.
    : Bodies and Pleasures has been characterized as a confessional discourse that manages to subvert confessional practice. Here it is characterized and discussed as an askesis that works to transform confessional practice as it transforms the writer/reader. Two questions emerge through that transformation: (1) How is race (in particular, whiteness) to be lived? (2) What are the possibilities for political subjectivity in the absence of dualism and the intensification of awareness of our normalization?
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  • Violence and the Scientific Vocation.Charles Thorpe - 2004 - Theory, Culture and Society 21 (3):59-84.
    This article examines the implications for the notion of scientific vocation of the modern intersection between science and violence, realized most powerfully in the atomic bomb. Tracing the career and political trajectory of atomic physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer and drawing on the theories of Max Weber, Julien Benda and Michel Foucault, the article addresses ethical ambiguities and tensions in the modern scientific vocation. I argue that Oppenheimer’s moral and political struggles in relation to nuclear weapons were attempts to come to (...)
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  • At the Crossroads of the Radical.Fuyuki Kurasawa - 2000 - Theory, Culture and Society 17 (4):145-155.
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  • Tijelo i tekst: genealogija praksi razdvajanja.Dušan Ristić & Dušan Marinković - 2015 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 35 (3):435-453.
    U radu identificiramo transformacije od individualizacije i lokalizacije praksi nad konkretnom tjelesnošću do zbirnih političkih praksi nad tijelom-populacijom. Na taj način otvaramo genealoški, a ne historicistički pristup problemu erozije paleosimbolike i pojave diskurzivnosti tijela kroz diskontinuitet tijela i teksta. U procesima sveopće društvene deritualizacije, a ponajprije javne komunikacije, koja označava racionalizaciju zapadnjačkog društva, krajem 18. stoljeća pojavile su se nove forme iskaza: medicinski, psihijatrijski, pravni, pedagoški, psihološki, koji se grupiraju u tekst/znanje/moć. Oslanjajući se na analitiku moći Michela Foucaulta, u radu (...)
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  • In risk we trust/Editing embryos and mirroring future risks and uncertainties.Eva Šlesingerová - 2019 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 22 (2):191-200.
    Tendencies and efforts have shifted from genome description, DNA mapping, and DNA sequencing to active and profound re-programming, repairing life on genetic and molecular levels in some parts of contemporary life science research. Mirroring and materializing this atmosphere, various life engineering technologies have been used and established in many areas of life sciences in the last decades. A contemporary progressive example of one such technology is DNA editing. Novel developments related to reproductive technologies, particularly embryo editing, prenatal human life engineering, (...)
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  • Post-sovereign power and leadership.Leslie Paul Thiele - 2019 - Contemporary Political Theory 18 (2):158-179.
    Power and leadership are typically theorized as exercises of sovereignty in the western tradition of thought. This essay takes up Michel Foucault’s challenge to escape the ‘spell of monarchy’ in our thinking in order to move beyond sovereign models of power. Interdisciplinary scholarship on complex adaptive systems provides fertile ground for this endeavor, illustrating the dynamics of post-sovereign power and opportunities for post-sovereign leadership. Viewing human organizations as complex adaptive systems helps us to theorize leadership without over-simplifying its nature or (...)
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  • (1 other version)The Learning is In‐between: The search for a metalanguage in Indigenous education.Neil Harrison - 2005 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 37 (6):871-884.
    Following the first significant research into Indigenous methods of learning, it was argued that Indigenous students could learn western knowledge using Indigenous ways of learning. Subsequent research contradicted this finding to take the position that Indigenous students must learn western knowledge using western methods and so this set the scene for the development of a pedagogy where Indigenous students could learn how to learn. Theorists in Indigenous education began to search for a metalanguage. Crosscultural theorists have perceived this metalanguage in (...)
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  • The Philosophical Underpinnings of Social Constructionist Discourse Analysis.Marek Gralewski - 2011 - Lodz Papers in Pragmatics 7 (1):155-171.
    The Philosophical Underpinnings of Social Constructionist Discourse Analysis Although discourse analysis emerges as a multi-faceted research method reflecting various schools of thought, disciplines and approaches, it is possible to pinpoint some meta-theoretical issues or fundamental assumptions common for most of them. This article aims to investigate different philosophical aspects and theoretical foundations that inform discourse analysis, such as the interplay between epistemological and ontological dimensions or the definition of language itself. Because space does not allow an in-depth discussion of all (...)
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  • From the historical a priori to the dispositif: Foucault, the phenomenological legacy, and the problem of transcendental genesis.Kevin Thompson - 2016 - Continental Philosophy Review 49 (1):41-54.
    What philosophical motivations lay behind the emergence of the genealogical method in Foucault’s thought? Pace traditional interpretations, I argue that genealogy is best construed as a supplementary addition to the archaeological mode of investigation. It addresses an issue that arose within the problematic to which the archaeological method responds, but which that method was not designed to solve: the problem of “transcendental genesis” as this issue was defined within the unique parameters set forth by the French phenomenological tradition.
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  • Normative Embodiment. The role of the body in Foucault’s Genealogy. A Phenomenological Re-Reading.Maren Wehrle - 2016 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 47 (1):56-71.
    ABSTRACTIn Foucault's later works, experience and embodiment become important for explaining the normative constitution of the subject: for norms to be effective, discourses are insufficient – they must be experienced and embodied. Practices of “discipline” inscribe power constellations and discourses into subjective experience and bodies. In his lectures on the Hermeneutics of the Subject, he turns this “violent” form of normative embodiment into an ethical perspective by referring to the Stoic tradition. Even though Foucault never developed a notion of experience (...)
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  • Complexity, Ecology and the Materiality of Information.J. Smith - 2005 - Theory, Culture and Society 22 (5):141-163.
    This article contributes to understanding the effect of complexity theory on the social sciences. It analyses the relationships between complex processes of self-organization and the environment or ecology in which these dynamics take place. Two factors are prioritized: the role of information in the formation of complex structure and the development of ‘landscapes’ or topologies of possibility. The authors argue for an ontology that founds both material and informational structures, and for a radical continuity between the general thermodynamics of emergent (...)
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  • On Customers and Costs: A Story from Public Sector Science.John Law & Madeleine Akrich - 1994 - Science in Context 7 (3):539-561.
    The ArgumentIn this we explore some of the ways in which a state scientific laboratory (Daresbury SERC) reacted to the rtetoric and forces of the marketpace in the 1980s. We describe laboratory attempts to create what we call “good customers” while converting itself into a “good seller” by developing a particulat set of costing practicting that were closely related to the implementation of a management accounting system. Finally, we consider how Daresbury response to “market forces” influenced scintific and organzational practice, (...)
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  • Archaeological choreographic practices: Foucault and Forsythe.Mark Franko - 2011 - History of the Human Sciences 24 (4):97-112.
    Although Michel Foucault never wrote of dance as an example of a bodily discipline in the classical age, he did affect the art of contemporary ballet through his influence on the work of William Forsythe. This article interprets Foucault’s influence on Forsythe up until the early 1990s and also examines how Forsythe’s choreography ‘responded’ to issues of agency, inscription and discipline that characterize Foucault’s thought on corporeality. Ultimately, it asks whether Forsythe’s use of Foucauldian theory leads to a reinterpretation of (...)
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  • Foucault historien et “historien ” du présent.J. N. Kaufmann - 1986 - Dialogue 25 (2):223-.
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  • The Cultivation of Moral Character: A Buddhist Challenge to Social Workers.Bjarne Øvrelid - 2008 - Ethics and Social Welfare 2 (3):243-261.
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  • (1 other version)Deconstructing and transgressing the theory—practice dichotomy in early childhood education.Hillevi Lenz Taguchi - 2007 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 39 (3):275–290.
    This article theorizes and exemplifies reconceptualized teaching practices, both in early childhood education 1 and in a couple of programs within the new Swedish Teacher Education . 2 These programs are tightly knit to the last 12 years of reconceptualized early childhood education practices in and around Stockholm, built on deconstructive, co‐constructive, and re‐constructive principles, inspired by poststructural and feminist poststructural theories. The aim is foremost to work towards a dissolution and/or transgression of the modernist theory‐practice binary that dominates ECE (...)
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  • On visibility and power: An Arendtian corrective of Foucault. [REVIEW]Neve Gordon - 2002 - Human Studies 25 (2):125-145.
    Freedom, conceived ontologically, is power's condition of possibility. Yet, considering that the subject's interests and identity are constantly shaped, one still has to explain how – theoretically speaking – individuals can resist control. This is precisely the issue I address in the following pages. Following a brief overview of Foucault's contribution to our understanding of power, I turn to discuss the role of visibility vis-à-vis control, and show how the development of disciplinary techniques reversed the visibility of power. While Foucault (...)
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  • How to tell the political truth: Foucault on new combinations of the basic modes of veridiction.Chris Barker - 2019 - Contemporary Political Theory 18 (3):357-378.
    This article pays close attention to Michel Foucault's theory that political regimes are enlightened through courageous free speech. A Foucaultian enlightenment occurs not when philosophical reason completely replaces superstition and enthusiasm in the public sphere, but instead when the parrhesiast partially organizes competing claims to know and to speak the truth. While much of the recent scholarly literature on Foucault’s later lectures emphasizes the political importance of the parrhesiast, less attention has been paid to the overlap and/or incompatibility between parrhesia (...)
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  • Politics of Flight : A Philosophical Refuge.T. Rahimy - 2017 - Dissertation, Erasmus University Rotterdam
    In this research, the political relationality in-between life and expression is viewed on through Deleuze and Guattari’s rhizomatic anti-methodology. In the first part, the methodological context is elaborated and brought into relation with Arendt and Agamben's work. After Part I Dispositioning a Milieu in which I dispose the conceptual and paradigmatic frameworks of thinking within politics of flight; in Part II Exposition of Milieus the diversity of practices within the politics of flight are mapped out. This provides a politico-philosophical diagnosis (...)
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  • “People Hide, But I'm Here. I Count:” Examining Undocumented Youth Identity Formation in an Urban Community-School.Sophia Rodriguez - 2017 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 53 (5):468-491.
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  • Danger, Crime and Rights: A Conversation between Michel Foucault and Jonathan Simon.Michel Foucault, Jonathan Simon & Stuart Elden - 2017 - Theory, Culture and Society 34 (1):3-27.
    This article is a transcript of a conversation between Michel Foucault and Jonathan Simon in San Francisco in October 1983. It has never previously been published and is transcribed on the basis of a tape recording made at the time. Foucault and Simon begin with a discussion of Foucault’s 1977 lecture ‘About the Concept of the “Dangerous Individual” in 19th-Century Legal Psychiatry’, and move to a discussion of notions of danger, psychiatric expertise in the prosecution cases, crime, responsibility and rights (...)
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  • (1 other version)Foucault, Education, the Self and Modernity.Kenneth Wain - 1996 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 30 (3):345-360.
    Michel Foucault is often criticised in English-speaking circles for being interested only in power as domination, and of being uninterested in freedom and social reform. This paper shows, however, that Foucault's overarching concern was with the constitution of the self under conditions of modernity. It emphasises the significance of his interest in the Classical project of ‘Self-care’, and of his countermodernist educational programme in which the skills of self-governance and the ethical (non-dominating) governance of others, as well as the practice (...)
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  • (1 other version)Eric Wolf.Irene Portis-Winner - 2006 - Sign Systems Studies 34 (2):339-355.
    This paper discusses Eric Wolf’s (1923–1999) analysis of power in his last monograph, Anthropology (Wolf 1964) and last book Envisioning Power (Wolf 1999). In Anthropology, Wolf (1964: 96) wrote that the “anthropological point of vantage is that of a world culture, struggling to be born.” What is worth studying is human experience in all its variability and complexity. His aim was to set the framework bridging the humanities with anthropology. He never gave up this quest, only expanding it. In the (...)
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  • The philosophy of structuralism in language and linguistics.Bahram Moghaddas & O. V. Dekhnich - unknown
    Structuralism underlies on the concepts that every system possesses a structure, that structure determines the position of every element of a whole, that structural rules deal with coexistence than changes, and that structures are the "real things" underlying the surface of meaning. In language and linguistic studies, structuralism includes collecting a corpus of utterances and then attempting to classify all of the elements of the corpus at their different linguistic levels.
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  • (1 other version)Psychotherapy’s Philosophical Values: Insight or Absorption?Hakam Al-Shawi - 2006 - Human Studies 29 (2):159-179.
    According to insight-oriented psychotherapies, the change clients undergo during therapy results from insights gained into the "true" nature of the self, which entail greater self-knowledge and self-understanding. In this paper, I question such claims through a critical examination of the epistemological and metaphysical values underlying such forms of therapy. I claim that such psychotherapeutic practices are engaged in a process that subtly "absorbs" clients into the therapist's philosophical framework which is characterized by a certain problematic conception of subjectivity, knowledge, and (...)
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  • (1 other version)The making of the dull, deficient and backward pupil in British elementary education 1870–1914.Ian Copeland - 1996 - British Journal of Educational Studies 44 (4):377-394.
    Michel Foucault's concept of normalisation is taken as a basis to explore the factors involved in the identification of dull, deficient and backward pupils in British Elementary Education between 1870 and 1914. Normalisation consists of the five processes of comparison, differentiation, hierarchisation, homogenisation and exclusion. These processes operate through dividing practices which distribute groups socially and are supported in this work by scientific ideas. In this instance, the norm of the intellect is the basis of the dividing practices. The empirical (...)
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  • Introduction to the symposium.Emmanuelle Cheyns & Lone Riisgaard - 2014 - Agriculture and Human Values 31 (3):409-423.
    A number of multi-stakeholder initiatives (MSIs) and commodity roundtables have been created since the 1990s to respond to the growing criticism of agriculture’s environmental and social impacts. Driven by private and global-scale actors, these initiatives are setting global standards for sustainable agricultural practices. They claim to follow the new standard-making virtues of inclusiveness and consensus and base their legitimacy on their claim of balanced representation of, and participation by, all categories of stakeholders. This principle of representing a wide range of (...)
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  • Emancipation as a Three‐Dimensional Process for the Twenty‐First Century.Diana Coole - 2015 - Hypatia 30 (3):530-546.
    This article elicits two overlapping frameworks in which emancipation has been understood and applied to women. The first distinguishes between a) an original definition grounded in Roman Law and defined as release from slavery and b) an Enlightenment sense in which an emancipatory process is associated with a critical ethos. I derive this latter meaning from an analysis of Kant's and Foucault's respective essays on enlightenment. Although they agree that emancipation is an ongoing critical task, I emphasize two aspects of (...)
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  • Power and practices: questions concerning the legislation of health professions in B razil.Isabela S. C. Velloso & Christine Ceci - 2015 - Nursing Philosophy 16 (3):153-160.
    Developments in professional practice can be related to ongoing changes in relations of power among professionals, which often lead to changes in the boundaries of practices. The differing contexts of practices also influence these changing relations among health professionals. Legislation governing professional practice also differs from country to country. In Brazil, over the past 12 years, in a climate of deep disagreement, a new law to regulate medical practice has been discussed. It was sanctioned, or made into law, but with (...)
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  • Powers of Life and Death Beyond Governmentality.Mitchell Dean - 2002 - Cultural Values 6 (1):119-138.
    The work of Foucault on liberal government, and that of his followers, is subject to two dangers. The first is to regard the critical character of liberalism (as governing through freedom) as providing safeguards against the despotic potentials of biopower and sovereignty. The second is to regard these heterogenous powers of life and death as somehow simply relocated or reinscribed within the field of liberal governmentality. The latter point is a major methodological error; the former closes the gap between the (...)
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  • Reviewing Foucault: possibilities and problems for nursing and health care.Julianne Cheek & Sam Porter - 1997 - Nursing Inquiry 4 (2):108-119.
    This paper addresses Foucauldian theory and its usefulness to nursing research. It is written in the form of a discussion between the authors on the merits and liabilities of Foucauldian theory as applied to analyses of nursing. As such, it focuses upon some of the more pertinent critiques of both Foucauldian and postmodern theory. By addressing Foucault from two different positions, the discussion seeks to demonstrate the complexity of Foucauldian theory and warns against oversimplification in its application to nursing research. (...)
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  • Nurses and medication error: a discursive reading of the literature.Terri Gibson - 2001 - Nursing Inquiry 8 (2):108-117.
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  • The paradox of the Aged Care Act 1997: the marginalisation of nursing discourse.Jocelyn Angus & Rhonda Nay - 2003 - Nursing Inquiry 10 (2):130-138.
    The paradox of the Aged Care Act 1997: the marginalisation of nursing discourse This paper examines the marginalisation of nursing discourse, which followed the enactment of the Aged Care Act 1997. This neo‐reform period in aged care, dominated by theories of economic rationalism, enshrined legislation based upon market principles and by implication, the provision of care at the cheapest possible price. This paper exposes some of the gaps in the neo‐reform period and challenges the assertion that the amalgamation of nursing (...)
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  • Measuring Justice: Notes on Fish, Foucault, and the Law.Steven Mailloux - 1997 - Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature 9 (1):1-10.
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  • Pigs and People: Sociological Perspectives on the Discipline of Nonhuman Animals in Intensive Confinement.Joel Novek - 2005 - Society and Animals 13 (3):221-244.
    Highly concentrated intensive confinement systems have become the norm in agriculture concerning nonhuman animals. These systems have provoked a lively debate from an animal welfare perspective. Sociologists can contribute to this debate by drawing parallels between the institutional regulation of human beings and of animals under confinement. Results of research on the transformation of Canadian hog production from the 1950s to the present—based on the evolution of plans for sow housing produced by the Canada Plan Service—showed a much tighter compression (...)
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  • Rosie Harding: Regulating Sexuality: Legal Consciousness in Lesbian and Gay Lives: Routledge, London, 2010, ISBN-10: 0415574382. [REVIEW]Aleardo Zanghellini - 2011 - Feminist Legal Studies 19 (1):97-100.
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  • Reclaiming Agency, Recovering Change? An Exploration of the Practice Theory of Theodore Schatzki.Raymond Caldwell - 2012 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 42 (3):283-303.
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  • The adequacy of the aesthetic.Alan Singer - 1994 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 20 (1-2):39-72.
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  • The New Biopolitics.Jiangxia Yu & Jingwei Liu - 2009 - Journal of Academic Ethics 7 (4):287-296.
    The biotech revolution profoundly changes and reconstructs the Foucaultian concept of biopolitics from different dimensions. It declares the coming of the Age of Biocapitalism, which opens a new pattern of modern power allocation of life governance and shows people two prospects simultaneously: utopian hopes and dystopian desperation. Biocapitalism has not only produced ethical degeneration and cultural shock, but more importantly, has opened new areas for political hegemony and economic aggression through the reconstruction of biopolitics, and the enhancement of capital’s comprehensive (...)
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  • Property, privacy and personhood in a world of ambient intelligence.Niels van Dijk - 2010 - Ethics and Information Technology 12 (1):57-69.
    Profiling technologies are the facilitating force behind the vision of Ambient Intelligence in which everyday devices are connected and embedded with all kinds of smart characteristics enabling them to take decisions in order to serve our preferences without us being aware of it. These technological practices have considerable impact on the process by which our personhood takes shape and pose threats like discrimination and normalisation. The legal response to these developments should move away from a focus on entitlements to personal (...)
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  • Human dispossession and human enhancement.Jason Scott Robert - 2005 - American Journal of Bioethics 5 (3):27 – 29.
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  • Concepts of "action", "structure" and "power" in "critical social realism": A positive and reconstructive critique.Heikki Patomäki - 1991 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 21 (2):221–250.
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  • Michel Foucault: Liberation, freedom, education.James D. Marshall - 2002 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 34 (4):413–418.
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  • Rationalismv.Irrationalism? Habermas's response to foucault.Dieter Freundlieb - 1988 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 31 (2):171-192.
    This paper has two aims, as an exposition of Jürgen Habermas's response to the work of Michel Foucault, and to engage in and assess this debate between two influential contemporary schools of Continental philosophy. Habermas locates Foucault's project in the history of several attempts at a totalizing critique of reason, attempts which are trapped in a performative self?contradiction. Habermas also argues that Foucault is still caught up in the conceptual straitjacket of the philosophy of the subject which his theory was (...)
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  • Foucault's neoliberal ideology.David Sherman - 2019 - European Journal of Philosophy 27 (2):500-514.
    European Journal of Philosophy, EarlyView.
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  • The politics of victimage:: Power and subjection in a US anti-gay campaign.Michael Blain - 2005 - Critical Discourse Studies 2 (1):31-50.
    This paper articulates a genealogical approach to critical discourse analysis derived from Michel Foucault and Kenneth Burke. The possibilities of this approach are displayed through a case study of the discourses produced by the 1994 anti-gay, ‘no special rights’ initiative in Idaho. Proponents of the initiative represented themselves as conservative Idaho citizens fighting a culture war to preserve traditional family values against a powerful, sexually perverse subject with a militant gay agenda. The analysis traces the emergence and dynamic interplay of (...)
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