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714 / Secondary Works Cited

Vallier, Robert. 2005. “Institution: The Signiicance of Merleau-Ponty’s 1954 Course at the Collège de France,” Chiasmi International 7: Life and Individuation:263–280.

Venturino, Diego. 1993. “A la politique comme à la guerre? A propos des cours de Michel Foucault au Collège de France,” Storia della Storiograia 23:135–152.

2003. “Race et historie. Le paradigme nobiliaire de la distinction socieal au debut du XVIIIe siecle,” in L’idée de ‘race’ dans les sciences humaines et la litterature (XVIIIe–XIXe siecles), ed. Sarga Moussa. Paris: L’Harmattan, pp. 19–38.

Veyne, Paul. 1984. Writing History: Essay on Epistemology, trans. Mina Moore-Rinvolucri. Manchester: Manchester University Press.

1985. “Homosexuality in Ancient Rome,” in Western Sexuality: Practices and Precept in Past and Present Times, ed. Philippe Artières and André Béjin. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

1997a. “The Final Foucault and His Ethics,” trans. Catherine Porter and Arnold Davidson, in Foucault and His Interlocutors, ed. Arnold Davidson. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 225–233.

1997b. “Foucault Revolutionizes History,” in Foucault and His Interlocutors, ed. Arnold Davidson. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 146–182.

2010. Foucault: His Thought, His Character, trans. Janet Lloyd. Cambridge: Polity Press. Visker, Rudi. 1995. Michel Foucault: Genealogy as Critique, trans. Chris Turner. London: Verso. Webb, David. 2003. “On Friendship: Derrida, Foucault and the Practice of Becoming,” Research

in Phenomenology 33:119–140.

2013. Foucault’s Archaeology: Science and Transformation. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

Wickham, Gary. 2006. “Foucault, Law, and Power: A Reassessment,” Journal of Law and Society 33, no. 4:596–614.

Wilson, Richard. 2007. Shakespeare in French Theory: King of Shadows. New York: Routledge. Winnubst, Shannon. 2006a. Queering Freedom. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

ed. 2006b. Reading Bataille Now. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

Authors’ Biographical Statements

Amy Allen is the Parents Distinguished Research Professor in the Humanities and professor of philosophy and women’s and gender studies at Dartmouth College. In 2010 and 2012, she was a Humboldt Fellow at the University of Frankfurt.

Philippe Artières is a French historian and head of research at the Centre national de la recherche scientiique in Paris. He is the author of a number of titles, including 1968, années politiques (éditions Thierry Magnier, collection Troisième Culture, 2008) and Le groupe d’information sur les prisons: Archives d’une lutte, 1970–1972 (with Michelle ZancariniFournel, IMEC, 2001).

Banu Bargu is an assistant professor of politics at The New School. She recently authored the book Starve and Immolate: From Biopolitics to the Weaponization of Life

(Columbia University Press, forthcoming).

Miguel de Beistegui is professor of philosophy at the University of Warwick. He recently delivered the Lev Chestov Lectures at the Institute of Philosophy of the Academy of Science in Moscow. He is also the principal investigator for the Leverhulme Research Project in Bioethics and Biopolitics. His most recent books include Proust as Philosopher: The Art of Metaphor (Routledge, 2012) and Aesthetics After Metaphysics: From Mimesis to Metaphor

(Routledge, 2012).

Robert Bernasconi is Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of Philosophy at the Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of How to Read Sartre (Norton, 2006).

James Bernauer is the Kraft Family Professor in the Philosophy Department at Boston College, where he is also the director of its Center for Christian-Jewish Learning.

Jean-François Bert is a historian of the social sciences. Recent publications include

Introduction à Michel Foucault (Editions La Découverte, 2011) and Des Gestes aux techniques. Les techniques dans les sociétés pré-machinistes de André Georges Haudricourt, édition établie, corrigée et annotée (Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, 2010).

Olivia Custer is a visiting assistant professor of philosophy at Bard College. She has written and lectured extensively on Derrida, Immanuel Kant, and Michel Foucault. She is the co-editor of L’ex-Yougoslavie en Europe: de la faillite des démocraties au processus de paix

(L’Harmattan, 1997).

715

716 / Authors’ Biographical Statements

Andrew Cutrofello is professor of philosophy at Loyola University, Chicago. He is the author of Continental Philosophy: A Contemporary Introduction (Routledge, 2005) and is currently writing a book about philosophical representations of Hamlet.

Don T. Deere received his BA in philosophy and government from Cornell University and currently is a PhD candidate in philosophy at DePaul University. His areas of research include twentieth-century French philosophy, Latin American philosophy, and the history and philosophy of space.

Andrew Dilts is assistant professor of political science at Loyola Marymount University. His recent publications include “From ‘Entrepreneur of the Self’ to ‘Care of the Self’: Neoliberal Governmentality and Foucault’s Ethics,” in Foucault Studies, 12 (Octobert 2011): 130–146 and “To Kill a Thief: Punishment, Proportionality, and Criminal Subjectivity in Locke’s Second Treatise,” in Political Theory, volume 40, number 1 (February 2012): 58-83. His Punishment and Inclusion is forthcoming with Fordham University Press, 2014.

Marc Djaballah is associate professor of philosophy at Université du Québec à Montréal. He has published Kant, Foucault and Forms of Experience (Routledge, 2008, 2011).

Stuart Elden is professor of political geography at Durham University. His book The Birth of Territory will appear in 2013 with University of Chicago Press.

Fred Evans is professor of philosophy and director of the Center for Interpretive and Qualitative Research at Duquesne University. His most recent book is The Multivoiced Body: Society and Communication in the Age of Diversity (Columbia University Press, 2008, 2011).

Thomas R. Flynn is the Sandler Candor Dobbs Professor of Philosophy at Emory University. He is the author of Sartre and Marxist Existentialism: The Test Case of Collective Responsibility (Chicago, 1986) and Sartre, Foucault, and Historical Reason (vol. 1): Toward an Existentialist Theory of History (Chicago, 1997), (vol. 2): A Post-structuralist Mapping of History

(Chicago, 2005).

Erinn Gilson is assistant professor of philosophy at the University of North Florida. She recently published the article “Vulnerability, Ignorance, and Oppression” in Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy and is completing a book on the ethics of vulnerability, which will be published by Routledge in fall 2013.

David-Olivier Gougelet is a professor of philosophy at Simpson College. He focuses mainly on contemporary European philosophy (nineteenthand twentieth-century continental philosophy), and particularly on the role of the concept of biopower in the work of Michel Foucault. He has published on the concepts of race and medicalization in Foucault.

Frédéric Gros is visiting assistant professor of philosophy at University Paris East Creteil and the editor of Foucault's inal lectures at the Collège de France.

Gary Gutting holds the Notre Dame Endowed Chair in Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame. His most recent book is Thinking the Impossible: French Philosophy since 1960

(Oxford University Press, 2011).

Samir Haddad is assistant professor of philosophy at Fordham University. He is the author of Derrida and the Inheritance of Democracy (Indiana University Press, 2013).

Devonya N. Havis is assistant professor of philosophy at Canisius College. She specializes in ethics, twentieth-century continental philosophy, and African American philosophy. Prior to Canisius, Havis was an associate professor of philosophy at Virginia Union University. She holds a PhD in philosophy from Boston College and a BA in religion from Williams College.

Authors’ Biographical Statements / 717

Jared Hibbard-Swanson is a PhD candidate at Pennsylvania State University. He is currently working on a dissertation that critically analyzes how biopolitics shapes education in democratic states.

Lynne Huffer is professor of women’s, gender, and sexuality studies at Emory University. She recently received the Florence Howe Award for best feminist scholarship in English from the Modern Language Association (2011).

Arun Iyer teaches philosophy at Seattle University. He has a book under contract with Continuum Press titled Towards an Epistemology of Ruptures: The Case of Heidegger and

Foucault.

Stephanie Jenkins is an assistant professor in the School of History, Philosophy, and Religion at Oregon State University. She recently received her dual PhD in philosophy and women’s studies from the Pennsylvania State University.

Mark Kelly is lecturer in philosophy at Monash University. He is the author of The Political Philosophy of Michel Foucault (Routledge, 2009).

Colin Koopman is assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Oregon. He is the author of Genealogy as Critique: The Problems of Modernity in Foucault (Indiana University Press, 2012) and Pragmatism as Transition: Historicity and Hope in James, Dewey, and Rorty

(Columbia University Press, 2009).

Joshua Kurdys is a lecturer at the Pennsylvania State University World Campus. He successfully defended his dissertation, “Genealogical Critique in the Later Work of Michel Foucault,” in 2011.

Leonard Lawlor is Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of Philosophy at Pennsylvania State University. His most recent book is Early Twentieth Century Continental Philosophy (Indiana University Press, 2011).

Federico Leoni is a philosopher at the University of Milan. He is co-editor of Chiasmi International. He was the invited professor at the Summer School, Université de Toulouse/ Université de Bonn, in September 2012.

Richard A. Lynch teaches philosophy at DePauw University. His recent publications include chapters in Michel Foucault: Key Concepts and A Companion to Foucault.

Mary Beth Mader is a professor of philosophy and director of graduate admissions at the University of Memphis. She is the author of Sleights of Reason: Norm, Bisexuality, Development (The SUNY Press, 2011; Gender Theory Series, ed. Tina Chanter).

Bill Martin is professor of philosophy at DePaul University in Chicago. He is the author of nine books, most recently Ethical Marxism: The Categorical Imperative of Liberation.

Todd May is Class of 1941 Memorial Professor of the Humanities at Clemson University. He is the author of eleven books of philosophy, most recently Friendship in an Age of Economics (Lexington Books, 2012).

Corey McCall is assistant professor of philosophy and religion at Elmira College. His recent articles on Foucault’s work include “The Art of Life: Foucault’s Reading of Baudelaire’s ‘The Painter of Modern Life’” and “Foucault, Iran, and the Question of Religious Revolt.”

Margaret A. McLaren holds the Harriet W. and George D. Cornell Chair in Philosophy at Rollins College. She is the author of Feminism, Foucault and Embodied

718 / Authors’ Biographical Statements

Subjectivity (The SUNY Press, 2002), which was nominated for an SPEP book award, and has written a number of articles on Foucault.

Edward McGushin is an associate professor of philosophy at Stonehill College. In 2007, he published his book titled Foucault’s Askesis: An Introduction to the Philosophical Life

(published by Northeastern University Press in its Topics in Historical Philosophy series).

Ladelle McWhorter is the James Thomas Professor in Philosophy at the University of Richmond. Her latest book is Racism and Sexual Oppression in Anglo-America: A Genealogy

(Indiana University Press, 2009).

Eduardo Mendieta is professor of philosophy at Stony Brook University. In 2011, he received the Dean’s Award for Excellence in Graduate Teaching.

Warren Montag is professor of English and comparative literary studies at Occidental College, Los Angeles, CA. His most recent book is Philosophy’s Perpetual War: Althusser and His Contemporaries (Duke University Press, 2013).

Nicolae Morar is a postdoctoral fellow in bioethics at the Rock Ethics Institute at the Pennsylvania State University. He is also coauthoring a paper with Dan Kelly analyzing the roles disgust should be given in our society, and is co-editing two books: Biopower: Ethics

and Politics in the Twenty-irst Century with V. Cisney and Intersections in Bioethics: Animals, Environment, and Biotechnologies with J. Beever (under contract with Purdue University Press).

Ann V. Murphy is assistant professor of philosophy at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. She is the author of Violence and the Philosophical Imaginary (The SUNY Press, 2012).

John Nale is visiting assistant professor of philosophy at the University of North Florida. His doctoral thesis on Descartes and the mind-body problem was completed in 2011.

Jeffrey T. Nealon is Liberal Arts Research Professor of English and philosophy at the Pennsylvania State University. His latest book is Post-Postmodernism; or, the Cultural Logic of

Just-in-Time Capitalism.

Harry A. Nethery IV is an advanced PhD student in philosophy at Duquesne University. He recently received the Charles J. Dougherty Graduate Student Teaching Award.

Joanna Oksala is a senior research fellow in the Department of Philosophy, History, Culture and Art Studies at the University of Helsinki. She is the author of Foucault on Freedom (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), How to Read Foucault (London: Granta Books, 2007), and Foucault, Politics, and Violence (Northwestern University Press, 2012).

Timothy O’Leary is associate professor of philosophy at the University of Hong Kong. He has published Foucault and the Art of Ethics (Continuum, 2002) and Foucault and Fiction

(Continuum, 2009). He has edited several collections, including Foucault and Philosophy (Blackwell, 2010).

Luca Paltrinieri is a PhD candidate in philosophy (École Normale Supérieure de Lyon and University of Pisa). He is an associate researcher at the Centre International d’Etude de la Philosophie Française (Ecole Normale Supérieure-Ulm, Paris).

Paul Patton is professor of philosophy at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. He is the author of Deleuzian Concepts: Philosophy, Colonization, Politics (Stanford

Authors’ Biographical Statements / 719

University Press, 2010), and was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities in 2011.

Christopher Penfield is a PhD candidate in philosophy at Purdue University. His entry, “Foucault, Michel,” appears in Encyclopedia of Global Justice (Springer, 2011).

C. G. Prado is professor emeritus of philosophy at Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, and Fellow, Royal Society of Canada. His most recent publications are Coping with Choices to Die (2011), Starting with Descartes (Bloomsbury Academic, 2009), Foucault’s Legacy (Bloomsbury, 2009), Choosing to Die: Elective Death and Multiculturalism (Cambridge University Press, 2008), and Searle and Foucault on Truth (Cambridge University Press, 2006).

John Protevi is the Phyllis M. Taylor Professor of French Studies and professor of philosophy at Louisiana State University. He is the 2012 Scots Philosophical Association Centenary Fellow.

Judith Revel is on the faculty at Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne. She is a board member of the Centre Michel Foucault, overseeing the Foucault archives. Her recent publications include

Michel Foucault: Une pensée du discontinu (Mille et une nuits/Fayard, 2010), Cahier de l’Herne Foucault with Ph. Artières, F. Gros, and J.-F. Bert (L’Herne, 2011), and Dictionnaire politique à l’usage des gouvernés with F. Brugère, G. le Blanc, M. Gaille, M. Foessel, and P. Zaoui (Bayard, 2012).

Kas Saghafi is associate professor in philosophy at the University of Memphis. He researches and teaches in contemporary continental philosophy, philosophy and literature, and aesthetics. He is the author of Apparitions – Of Derrida’s Other (Fordham University Press, 2010).

Paolo Savoia earned his PhD in philosophy from the University of Pisa. He has published papers on Michel Foucault, the history of sexuality, the history of psychiatry, and the Franco-American tradition of historical epistemology. He is currently enrolled in the PhD program at the Department of the History of Science, Harvard University, where he works on the history of Renaissance medicine.

Jana Sawicki is Carl Vogt ’59 Professor of Philosophy at Williams College. She is currently co-editing A Companion to Foucault (Oxford: Blackwell) with Timothy O’Leary and Chris Falzon, as well as the queer theory issue of Foucault Studies with Shannon Winnubst. She has recently published a series of essays on Foucault and queer theory.

Alan D. Schrift is F. Wendell Miller Professor of Philosophy at Grinnell College. He recently edited the eight-volume History of Continental Philosophy (Acumen Publishing, 2011) and is currently editing The Complete Works of Friedrich Nietzsche for Stanford University Press.

Charles E. Scott is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy Emeritus and research professor of philosophy at Vanderbilt University. His most recent book is Living with Indifference (Indiana University Press).

Gary Shapiro is Tucker-Boatwright Professor of Humanities-Philosophy Emeritus at the University of Richmond; his article “Then and Now, Here and There: On the Grounds of Aesthetics, 1961–2011” appeared in The Journal of Speculative Philosophy in 2012.

Hugh J. Silverman was professor of philosophy and comparative literary and cultural studies at Stony Brook University. He was executive director of the International Association for Philosophy and Literature and was Fulbright Distinguished Chair of Art

720 / Authors’ Biographical Statements

Theory and Cultural Studies at the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts (Vienna, Austria). He passed away in 2013.

Patrick Singy is an independent scholar studying the philosophy and history of sexuality and medicine. He is the author of numerous publications, including “A Tergo: Taking History from Behind” (Pli – The Warwick Journal of Philosophy, forthcoming) and “The Popularization of Medicine in the Eighteenth Century: Writing, Reading and Rewriting Samuel Auguste Tissot’s Avis au peuple sur sa santé” ( Journal of Modern History 82 (2010): 769–800).

Allan Stoekl is professor of French and comparative literature at Pennsylvania State University. He has translated a number of works by Georges Bataille, Maurice Blanchot, and Paul Fournel. His most recent book is Bataille’s Peak: Energy, Religion, Postsustainability

(University of Minnesota Press, 2007). His current project is a study of avant-garde theories of the city from the perspective of questions of sustainability and gleaning.

Brad Stone is associate professor of philosophy and African American studies at Loyola Marymount University, where he also serves as director of the University Honors Program. Named one of Princeton Review’s top 300 professors in the United States, his work on Foucault has been published in Foucault Studies, The Other Journal, and Michel Foucault: Key Concepts (ed. Dianna Taylor).

Adrian Switzer, PhD, is an assistant professor of philosophy at Western Kentucky University. The author of many articles on such igures as Guy Debord, Gilles Deleuze, Michel Foucault, Luce Irigaray, Immanuel Kant, Jean-Luc Nancy, and Friedrich Nietzsche, he is presently completing a manuscript on Nietzsche and the Politics of May ’68.

Samuel Talcott is an assistant professor of philosophy at the University of the Sciences. He is the author of “Foucault and Historical Epistemology: Critique and Development

of the Philosophy of the Norm,” in Studies in the Philosophy of Michel Foucault: A French Alternative to Anglo-Americanism, ed. Brian Lightbody (Edwin Mellen Press, 2010).

Chloë Taylor is assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Alberta. She is the author of The Culture of Confession from Augustine to Foucault (Routledge 2008, 2010).

Dianna Taylor is associate professor of philosophy and currently holds the Shula Chair in Philosophy at John Carroll University in Cleveland, Ohio. She is editor of Michel Foucault: Key Concepts (Acumen, 2011).

Kevin Thompson is an associate professor of philosophy at DePaul University. He has published numerous articles on phenomenology, Foucault, Kant, and Hegel.

Robert Vallier is the academic program director for graduate studies at Columbia University’s Paris campus. He is the translator of several French philosophy books, in particular Merleau-Ponty’s Nature.

Pol van de Velde is professor of philosophy at Marquette University. He recently published Heidegger and the Romantics: The Literary Invention of Meaning (Routledge, 2012).

David Webb is on the faculty at Staffordshire University. He is the author of Foucault’s Archaeology: Science and Transformation (Edinburgh University Press, 2012).

Shannon Winnubst is associate professor in the Department of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Ohio State University. Her next book is entitled A Biopolitics of Cool:

Neoliberalism, Difference and Ethics.

INDEX

abnormal, 3–10, 38, 75

death, 94

confession, 319

difference, 106

diagnosis, 201

discursive formation, 183

discipline, 320

ethics, 123

disease, 95

exercise, 660

forms of life, 296

genealogy, 185, 386, 399

juridicality, 296

hermeneutics, 183, 184

legality, 247

human sciences, 237, 284

monster, 302

Kantian categories, 649

pleasure, 210

methodology, 404

population, 298, 319

phenomenology, 656

power, 300, 317

practice, 387, 388

racism, 419, 421

psychiatry, 406

sexuality, 75, 301

sexuality, 435

abnormality. See abnormal

of silence, 551

actuality, 10–13, 130

time, 636

apparatus, 130

truth, 386, 523

control, 130

archive, 20–24, 131, 194–195

critique, 648

actuality, 349

history, 198

archaeology, 348

intellectual, 225

contested language, 81

knowledge, 299

historical a priori, 203, 204

philosophy, 188, 196, 648

history, 130

Althusser, Louis, 203, 266, 267, 288, 490, 610,

statement, 121, 205

624, 682

transformative practice, 446

analytic philosophy, 17, 87, 648

art history, 327

anatomo-politics, 39, 40, 41, 44, 96, 374

Aufklärung. See Enlightenment, the

ancient philosophy, 57, 500, 558

author, 24–31, 267, 691

ancients, the, 137, 138, 139, 555–560, 615,

archaeology, 183

659, 672

discourse, 201

apparatus. See dispositif (apparatus)

event, 143

archaeology, 10–13, 183, 184, 201, 405

historical a priori, 204

archive, 22

history, 201

body, 51, 657

statement, 484

critique, 649

work, 572

721

722 / INDEX

Bataille, Georges, 80, 107, 149, 188, 237, 239, 289, 322, 430, 449, 493, 560–563

Nietzsche, 663 outside, the, 574

transgression, 509–511, 513–515 Bichat, Xavier, 257–258, 563–567

death, 94 illness, 309 life, 95 vitalism, 254

Binswanger, Ludwig, 567–572 anthropology, 635, 636 death, 689

Freud, 612 Heidegger, 633 imagination, 236 philosophy, 345 problematization, 403 psychology, 412

biohistory, 638 biopolitics, 42, 43 medicine, 297

biopolitics, 37–44 biopower, 46 body, 311, 660 control, 84

governmentality, 45, 48 human, the, 260 liberation from, 422 life, 44

Morel, Benedict Augustin, 421 power, 96, 374 psychoanalysis, 417

racism, 375, 542 security, 375 state, 481 strategy, 486

thanato-politics, 460 biopower, 3, 44–51

discipline, 117, 463 population, 459 racism, 421 sovereignty, 456

Blanchot, Maurice, 188, 289, 326, 430, 493, 572–577

anthropology, 649 contestation, 512 law, 243

outside, the, 239 transgression, 512

body, 38–39, 51–57, 113, 114 Ancient, 361

archaeology, 657

care of the self, 59, 659–660 Christian, 61 counternature, 311

death, 564–565 deformities, 6

discipline, 40–41, 96, 111, 112, 113–114, 116, 316, 458–459, 505, 552

disease, 95, 564 economy, 298 iction, 574 initude, 283, 340 genealogy, 310–311 ideology, 552 institutions, 222 living, 258, 260 mastery, 488 medicine, 201, 298 mind and, 276, 412 nature, 313

norm, 5, 117 phenomenology, 656, 657 population, 320

power, 540, 589

social body, 217, 220, 286, 292, 305, 365, 381, 421, 618

sovereignty, 3, 111, 505 subjectivity, 97 transformation, 210 truth, 353, 538 violence, 528–529

Boulainvilliers, Henri de, 577–580 race, 420

race war, 541–542 revolution, 439

Canguilhem, Georges, 580–588 archaeology, 14 discontinuity, 191, 289 epistemology, 129

error, 261 Hegel, 625

historical a priori, 204 history, 187, 189–191 knowledge, 233–234 life, 34, 254–257, 262 limit-experience, 149 medicine, 296 monster, the, 300 reason, 275

truth, 228 care, 57–61, 507

INDEX / 723

institutions, 506 pastoral power, 606

care of the self, 163, 185, 268, 334, 353, 411, 415

Ancient, 164, 352, 556–558 body, 660

freedom, 362 Hegel, 627 homosexuality, 210 pastoral power, 606 Plato, 670–671

self-knowledge, 444, 605–606 truth, 524, 556

Christianity, 58, 61–64 communism, 78 confession, 77, 444 counterconduct, 72 desire, 100, 361 negative theology, 430 obedience, 70 pastoral power, 76, 474 sexuality, 271, 429 truth, 76

civil society, 64–68 Althusser, 553 government, 251 liberalism, 251 state, the, 480

Clausewitz, Carl von, 693–695 politics, 365, 530, 541 tactics, 488

conduct, 71–74, 311, 545 abnormality, 6 Christianity, 488

counterconduct, 49, 382, 384, 434, 437, 474, 488, 647

discipline, 319, 486 discourse, 521 ethical, 363 ethics, 507 government, 478

governmental power, 156 governmentality, 45 Kant, 634

monstrosity, 301 moral, 452 natural, 311 pastoral power, 606 politics, 460 population, 88 possibilities, 382

power, 382, 384, 433, 434, 503, 525, 537

revolt, 474, 475 self, 389, 444, 452 sexual, 362

social relations, 544 subversive, 538 surveillance, 316 wisdom, 671

confession, 75–80 Ancient, 556 Christianization, 62 discipline, 319 identity, 319 individualization, 100 parresia, 353

pastoral power, 606 pleasure, 360 power, 100, 359 secular, 319

self, 444 truth, 452, 519

contestation, 80–83 Blanchot, 512 critique, 646 ethics, 445 outside, the, 574

phenomenology, 342 power, 531 revolution, 71

social objectivities, 532 teacher-student, 597 unreason, 91

control, 40, 83–87 biopolitics, 38, 39, 40–41 biopower, 46, 47, 49 Canguilhem, 586 capitalism, 39

crime, 302 desire, 359, 453

discipline, 112, 113, 114, 130, 159, 232, 316, 409

discourse, 105, 237 docile bodies, 389 education, 115 force-relations, 96 freedom, 160 governmentalization, 89 history, 441, 628 homosexuality, 208, 209 liberalism, 179, 251 life, 258, 542

norm, the, 117 object, 233