4.8.11

de Certeau on Foucault: popular procedures and power

Michel de Certeau on Michel Foucault's Discipline and Punish:
"In this work, instead of analyzing the apparatus exercising power (i.e., the localizable, expansionist, repressive, and legal institutions), Foucault analyzes the mechanisms (dispositifs) that have sapped the strength of these institutions and surreptitiously reorganized the functioning of power: "miniscule" technical procedures acting on and with details, redistributing a discursive space in order to make it the means of a generalized "discipline" (surveillance). This approach raises a new and different set of problems to be investigated. Once again, however, this "microphysics of power" privileges the productive apparatus (which produces the "discipline"), even though it discerns in "education" a system of "repression" and shows how, from the wings as it were, silent technologies determine or short-circuit institutional stage directions. If it is true that the grid of "discipline" is everywhere becoming clearer and more extensive, it is all the more urgent to discover how an entire society resists being reduced to it, what popular procedures (also "miniscule" and quotidian) manipulate the mechanisms of discipline and conform to them only in order to evade them, and finally, what "ways of operating" form the counterpart, on the consumer's (or "dominee's"?) side, of the mute processes that organize the establishment of socioeconomic order.

These "ways of operating" constitute the innumerable practices by means of which users reappropriate the space organized by techniques of sociocultural production. They pose questions at once analogous and contrary to those dealt with in Foucault's book: analogous, in that the goal is to perceive and analyze the microbe-like operations proliferating within technocratic structures and deflecting their functioning by means of a multitude of "tactics" articulated in the details of everyday life; contrary, in that the goal is not to make clearer how the violence of order is transmuted into a disciplinary technology, but rather to bring to light the clandestine forms taken by the dispersed, tactical, and makeshift creativity of groups or individuals already caught in the nets of "discipline:" Pushed to their ideal limits, these procedures and ruses of consumers compose the network of an antidiscipline..." (The Practice of Everyday Life)
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7 comments:

Anonymous said...

not that I am beyond the allure of gelt coinage but I'm just happy to be of some use and have a place to share my concerns/interets, not many places that welcome such inputs, let alone to see them put into such good use/context.
dmf

Anonymous said...

have folks read Bifo's Guatarri book?

http://www.generation-online.org/p/pbifo.htm

Jeremy Trombley said...

I like de Certeau - I think he provided a refreshing alternative to the overdetermination of structuralism. Still, I'm not sure he goes far enough. His Strategy/tactic duality seems to mirror a structure/agency duality without recognizing that structure and strategies are actually the work of myriad (often non-human) tactics/agencies.

His chapter on walking the city is fascinating, but it seems to me the person looking down on the city from above, seeing people like so many ants, is just as much an ant himself, only higher up... Does that make sense? Maybe I just misread or need to read more to get at this in his own work.

Michael- said...

@Dirk - And I sure appreciate your contributions.

@Jeremy - I would tend to agree with you Jeremy (big surprise i know). I think he and many others of that generation actually believed theory could give them a view from afar that is simple not possible. But their work laid the foundation for our sensitive-relativities.

The agency/structure issue really seems to be a key issue for you, which is great. Because I think its a 'knot' that must always be reworked to keep things lively. I hope we can have some discussions in the near future about it.

PS- I will be without internet for the next week, so i will not be able to moderate comments. Will do so when I get back!

M.

Anonymous said...

http://backdoorbroadcasting.net/2011/06/peter-miller-the-calculating-self/

Anonymous said...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rrMxyQP3rYY

Anonymous said...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-BjB6ox6CFY&feature=related

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