Archaeology of Knowledge: Outline / I. Introduction II. The Discursive Regularities

Similar documents
Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission.

Discourses and Power in Sustainable Consumption and Production debates

REVIEW THE SOCIAL THEORY OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICS

TOPIC: - THE PLACE OF KELSONS PURE THEORY OF LAW IN

The roles of theory & meta-theory in studying socio-economic development models. Bob Jessop Institute for Advanced Studies Lancaster University

1. Students access, synthesize, and evaluate information to communicate and apply Social Studies knowledge to Time, Continuity, and Change

This thesis is protected by copyright which belongs to the author.

WIKIPEDIA IS NOT A GOOD ENOUGH SOURCE FOR AN ACADEMIC ASSIGNMENT

Notes from discussion in Erik Olin Wright Lecture #2: Diagnosis & Critique Middle East Technical University Tuesday, November 13, 2007

The Public Good and Public Goods in Higher Education. Presented to IFE 2020 Senior Seminar East-West Center, 6 September 2006 Deane Neubauer

Cornell University East Asia Program

On the New Characteristics and New Trend of Political Education Development in the New Period Chengcheng Ma 1

Using indicators in a decision-making process challenges and opportunities

Noemi Gal-Or, Ph.D., LL.B. My intervention addresses the external relations of IR with another discipline - IL.

INTRODUCTION TO SECTION I: CONTEXTS OF DEMOCRACY AND EDUCATION

Sociological Marxism Volume I: Analytical Foundations. Table of Contents & Outline of topics/arguments/themes

A MONOGRAPHIC APPROACH TO THE LEGAL PROTECTION OF CONSUMERS

Quine on "Alternative Logics" and Verdict Tables. The Journal of Philosophy, Volume 77, Issue 5 (May, 1980), Alan Berger JSTOR

Social Studies Standard Articulated by Grade Level

Marx s unfinished Critique of Political Economy and its different receptions. Michael Heinrich July 2018

METHODOLOGICAL APPROACHES TO INVESTIGATION: 94 FROM DIALOGUE TO POLITICAL DIALOGUE

College of Arts and Sciences. Political Science

Moral authority of science in the modern world polity:

Preface Is there a place for the nation in democratic theory? Frontiers are the sine qua non of the emergence of the people ; without them, the whole

The Public Good and Public Goods in Higher Education. Presented to IFE 2020 Leadership Institute East-West Center, 10 September 2007 Deane Neubauer

Steps to Success Bachelor of Arts, Justice

PLT s GreenSchools! Correlation to the National Curriculum Standards for Social Studies

Centre for Economic and Social Studies

Some Probable Instances of Plagiarism in the Work of Professor Frank Fischer

MARXISM AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS ELİF UZGÖREN AYSELİN YILDIZ

Iran Academia Study Program

Cultural Diversity and Social Media III: Theories of Multiculturalism Eugenia Siapera

Comparison of Plato s Political Philosophy with Aristotle s. Political Philosophy

Dublin City Schools Social Studies Graded Course of Study Modern World History

Critical Discourse Analysis of Artful and Political language of Loki in the Movie Thor

Note: Principal version Equivalence list Modification Complete version from 1 October 2014 Master s Programme Sociology: Social and Political Theory

THE ENTREPRENEURIAL UNIVERSITY

Introduction. in this web service Cambridge University Press

THE WEALTH SYSTEM. POLITICAL ECONOMY

THIS PAPER IS NOT TO BE REMOVED FROM THE EXAMINATION HALLS

Juristic Concept of the Validity of Statutory Law

Basic Approaches to Legal Security Understanding and Its Provision at an International Level

Security, Territory, Population

The Construction of History under Indonesia s New Order: the Making of the Lubang Buaya Official Narrative

Rationalization and the Modernity of Europe

Alfred Schutz ( )

Methodological Foundations of Global History

5th European Conference of Ministers responsible for the cultural heritage. 5th European Conference of Ministers, Council of Europe

Allan Dreyer Hansen a a Institute for Society and Globalisation, Roskilde University, Denmark Published online: 05 Nov 2014.

Stratification: Rich and Famous or Rags and Famine? 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.

College of Arts and Sciences. Political Science

Performing political partnership A study of EU-Liberia relations

POLI 111: INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

MARXISM AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS ELİF UZGÖREN AYSELİN YILDIZ

Call for Papers. May 14-16, Nice

SOCIOLOGY (SOC) Explanation of Course Numbers

We the People: The Citizen and the Constitution

California Subject Examinations for Teachers

Disagreement, Error and Two Senses of Incompatibility The Relational Function of Discursive Updating

Political Science (PSCI)

The return of the Parthenon Marbles; Different agendas, frames and problem definitions

Marxian Economics. Capital : overview of the main topics and theses

System and Repetition in Legal Discourse: A Critical Account of Discourse Analysis of the Law

Rethinking Conceptualizations of Identity of the Detained-Disappeared. Catherine Brix University of Notre Dame

Courses PROGRAM AT THE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND DIPLOMACY. Course List. The Government and Politics in China

Epistemology and Political Science. POLI 205 Doing Research in Political Science. Epistemology. Political. Science. Fall 2015

Anti-immigration populism: Can local intercultural policies close the space? Discussion paper

Welsh Statutory Instrument 2001 No (W.323)

Constructing the West in Russian Foreign Policy Discourse 1. Tatiana Dubrovskaya. The West: Concept, Narrative and Politics

INNOVATIVE APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION Indigenous Knowledge and Human Capital Formation for Balanced Development

Framework of engagement with non-state actors

Prentice Hall Abriendo Paso: Gramatica 2007 and Abriendo Paso: Lectura 2007

Advisory Committee on Enforcement

Part I Introduction. [11:00 7/12/ pierce-ch01.tex] Job No: 5052 Pierce: Research Methods in Politics Page: 1 1 8

Enlightenment of Hayek s Institutional Change Idea on Institutional Innovation

USING SOCIAL JUSTICE, PUBLIC HEALTH, AND HUMAN RIGHTS TO PREVENT VIOLENCE IN SOUTH AFRICA. Garth Stevens

1. At the completion of this course, students are expected to: 2. Define and explain the doctrine of Physiocracy and Mercantilism

Universal History & the Problem of Time

An inventory of emerging innoviation projects in Belgian agriculture (*)

International Relations. Policy Analysis

- Call for Papers - International Conference "Europe from the Outside / Europe from the Inside" 7th 9th June 2018, Wrocław

American Government /Civics

United States History and Geography Correlated to the Revised NCSS Thematic Strands

POLITICS and POLITICS MAJOR. Hendrix Catalog

Dorin Iulian Chiriţoiu

ANALYSIS OF SOCIOLOGY MAINS Question Papers ( PAPER I ) - TEAM VISION IAS

Curriculum for the Master s Programme in Social and Political Theory at the School of Political Science and Sociology of the University of Innsbruck

The Law of the List: UN Counterterrorism Sanctions and the Politics of Global Security Law. G.T. Sullivan

COMMON COURSE OUTLINE. Political Science POLS 1195 Conflict and Negotiation

1920 DOI /j. cnki

lntertextuality and Ontology John Frow Let me propose the following theses:

New York State Social Studies High School Standards 1

National identity and global culture

Party Ideology and Policies

POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLI)

Medical Malpractice in Israel and the Financial and Non-financial Damage to the Victim

Registering with the State: are lobbying rules registering with the public?

FOREWORD LEGAL TRADITIONS. A CRITICAL APPRAISAL

2009 Senior External Examination

Position Paper Guidelines

Transcription:

Archaeology of Knowledge: Outline Outline by John Protevi / Permission to reproduce granted for academic use protevi@lsu.edu / http://www.protevi.com/john/foucault/ak.pdf I. Introduction A. Two trends in writing history 1. History proper: The Annales School: la longue durée, material civilization 2. History of ideas: rupture, discontinuity B. Same problem for 1) and 2): questioning of the document 1. Previous historiography: turning monuments into documents (of a subject) 2. Contemporary historiography: a. Works on documents to define unities, totalities, series, relations b. Turns documents into monuments so history becomes archaeology, the "intrinsic description of monuments" 3. Four consequences of new history a. [the series] current history seeks to constitute the series itself b. Discontinuity now both an instrument and an object of research c. Move from total history to general history (1) total history: principle of society, form of civilization; centralize (2) general history: discover relations btw series: draw "tables"; disperse d. Methodological problems 4. Interest in historiographic methodology a. New history vs. "philosophy of history" [=Kant/Hegel/Marx] b. Intersects w/ other "structuralist" fields, BUT (1) structuralism covers only part of new history (2) "structuralist" problematics in history not imported (3) no "structure" in history opposed to development [devenir] C. Origin of this espistemological mutation in historiography 1. Probably begins with Marx, but delayed registration and reflection; a. continuity in history is shelter for consciousness, subjectivity b. promise of [re-]appropriation of historical difference [Hegel, "humanist" Marx, "nostalgic" Heidegger, Gadamer] 2. Effects of this desire: reactions to, misreadings of Marx/Nietzsche/Freud 3. These reactions are a "conservative function" a. Cry of "murdering history" goes up when "threshold" is mention b. but this is just bewailing death of historiography tied to subject D. Situating Foucault's project re: the new historiography 1. Previous works were an "imperfect sketch" of mutations in historiography 2. Thus it is not a question of structure vs genesis, but of the subject 3. Difference btw AK and MC, BC, OT 4. Self-reflection on AK E. Concluding dialogue II. The Discursive Regularities A. The unities of discourse 1. Unquestioned unities to be suspended 2. Two linked but opposite themes (ensuring continuity) to be suspended 3. Positive statement of goals of AK a. must receive discourse in its sudden irruption, its dispersion b. Suspending unities frees field of totality of all effective statements... as events (1) 'a population of events in space of discourse in general' (2) 'project of a pure description of discursive events... as horizon of search for unities that form w/in it'

4. F's project vs. other analyses a. Linguistic analysis b. History of thought 5. Goal of analysis a. Restore to statement specificity of its occurrence as discontinuity, as event b. Prevent link to psychological synthesis, so other relations are grasped c. Describe other unites on basis of statements coexistence, succession, etc. 6. Provisional division as an initial approximation a. Criteria: density, spread, etc b. Target: sciences of man (where subject of discourse is the object of discourse) 7. Two provisos: analysis not limited to target; assumed limits provisional B. Discursive formations 1. Defer question of terms 'statement' 'event' 'discourse' (Part 3) 2. Question of the relations of statements: what are their unities? a. Objects as unities vs. rules of dispersion/transformation of objects b. Enunciative style (form of statements) vs. rules of dispersion of different types c. Concepts as unities vs. rules of dispersion of their appearance d. Themes as unities vs. rules of dispersion of points of choice 3. Definition of terms a. Discursive formation = system of dispersion of objects, types, concepts, choices b. Rules of formation = conditions of existence of statements in a given field 4. Ironic warning of 'danger' of losing subject and finding blank, indifferent space C. The formation of objects a. Surfaces of emergence b. Authorities of delimitation c. Grids of specification 2. Inadequacies of this simple listing 3. Formation of new objects as neither discoveries nor effects of institutional change 4. Must pursue problem of new formation of objects in discursive relations among 1a-c 5. Remarks and consequences a. Historical conditions of new objects are positive, not just limiting b. Discursive relations are established in field of non-discursive relations c. Discursive relations must be distinguished from (1) primary relations (btw non-discursive factors); establish relations of dependence for discursive relations (2) secondary relations in discourse: what psychiatry says re: family/criminality d. Discursive relations are at the limit of discourse 6. Summary a. Discursive relations form set of immanent and defining rules b. This is not a history of the referent (MC): anti-phenomenology c. Nor an analysis of meaning: anti-analytic philosophy d. Thus not a question of 'words and things' D. The formation of enunciative modalities a. Who speaks b. Institutional site c. Subject-position 2. Relations among these are the key 3. 'Further remark': non-reduction to subject 4. Rather, to space of exteriority, to dispersion of subjectivity-positions E. The formation of concepts

a. Forms of succession b. Forms of coexistence c. Procedures of intervention 2. Again, relations are the key 3. Preconceptual field is not a. horizon of ideality (a science of logic) b. or a genesis of abstractions (history of ideas as facts) c. Rules of formation in this field 'operate in discourse itself... uniform anonymity' d. But they are not valid for all domains; they are specific to fields F. The formation of strategies 1. Factors: a. Points of diffraction of discourse b. Economy of discursive constellation (choices related to other discourses) c. 'Another authority' (including non-discursive practices) 2. Relations as key to individualizing a discursive formation on basis of strategies a. These are neither subjective choices nor ideological translations of interest b. But systematically different ways of treating objects, forms, and concepts G. Remarks and consequences (What is gained by this new analysis?) 1. Interrelations among the four sets of rules 2. 'at limit of discourse'; 'schema of correspondence btw several temporal series' 3. Systems of formation do not determine micro-level of texts III. The Statement and the Archive A. Defining the statement 1. Statement is not a. Proposition (logic) b. Sentence (grammar) c. Speech act (Austin: NB: F later recants on this point) 2. Statement does not exist on same level a. as la langue (although it is made up of signs) b. Nor is it like perceptual objects (although it does have a certain materiality) 3. Statement is not a structure, but a 'function of existence' of signs B. The enunciative function 1. Relation of statement to correlate is not that of a. signifier to signified b. proposition to referent c. Sentence to meaning 2. Re: object/referent/meaning a. 'correlate' of statement is 'group of domains in which objects may appear or relations be assigned' b. Via correlate statement is 'linked to "referential"... laws of possibility, rules of existence' 3. Re: subject-positions a. Not grammatical subject, nor author of the formulation b. But a 'particular' vacant place that may in fact be filled by different individuals 4. Re: associated field a. Statement CANNOT operate w/o field of other statements b. Elements of the associated field 5. Re: material existence: 'repeatable materiality' a. 'institution': possibilities of reinscription and transcription b. Conditions imposed by its associated field: 'field of stabilization' C. The description of statements 1. What is task of describing statements?

a. First task: fix vocabulary (1) Formulation: (psychological) act that reveals linguistic performance as sign groups (2) Sentence (grammar); proposition (logic) as units recognized in performances (3) Statement: modality of existence proper to performances allowing them correlates, subject-positionality, associated fields, repeatable materiality (4) Discourse: groups of signs qua statements (belonging to single formation) (5) Discursive formation: law of series, of dispersion, of statements b. [second task: defining the statement]: not isolating an elementary unit, but defining conditions 2. Theory of statement related to previous analysis of discursive formations D. Rarity, exteriority, accumulation: F as 'happy positivist' 1. Rarity: 'everything is never said'; discourse as asset; question of power 2. Exteriority: not the retracing of expression; 'an anonymous field' 3. Accumulation: rémanence; materiality; additivity; recurrence; no search for origin E. The historical a priori and the archive 1. Historical a priori = positivity of discourse defining limited space of communication 2. Archive = general system of formation and transformation of statements 3. 'We are difference'; analysis of archive 'bursts open the other and the outside' IV. Archaeological Description A. Archaeology and the history of ideas 1. Characterization of history of ideas: genesis, continuity, totalization 2. Principles of archaeology B. The original and the regular 1. History of ideas deals with the new and the old 2. Archaeology: regularity of statements; set of conditions for enunciative function 3. Future projects of archaeology a. Different homogeneous fields of enunciative regularities b. Interior hierarchies w/in enunciative regularities: tree of enunciative derivation C. Contradictions 1. History of ideas: contradiction as residual mistake or fundamental motor of history 2. Archaeology: contradictions to be described for themselves; spaces of dissension a. Different types b. Different levels c. [Different] functions D. The comparative facts 1. Limited and regional comparison a. Each investigation yields a region of interpositivity (not a worldview) b. Horizon for archaeology = 'tangle of interpositivities'; multiple analyses needed 2. Play of analogies and differences at level of rules of formation; five tasks: 3. Relation btw discursive formations and non-discursive domains a. Arch is not symbolic or causal analysis b. But how political practice takes part in conditions of discourse E. Change and transformation 1. Apparent synchrony of discursive formations: suspension of 'calendar of formulations' reveals relations characterizing temporality of discursive formations 2. Rupture; the differentiation of differences a. Distinguishes levels of events: b. Substitute analysis of transformations for mere reference to 'change' c. Transformation of relations does not change all elements (analysis of continuity) d. Heterogeneity of ruptures; dispersion of discontinuities F. Science and knowledge

1. 'Positivities' disciplines, sciences 2. Savoir: rules of discursive practice for formation of a science: 'that of which one can speak in a discursive practice' 3. Savoir and ideology 4. Different thresholds and their specificity a. Positivity b. Epistemologization c. Scientificity d. Formalization 5. Different types of histories of sciences a. Level of formalization b. Threshold of Scientificity c. Threshold of epistemologization: archaeological history; analysis of episteme V. Conclusion A. Structuralism B. Phenomenology C. Status of 'archaeology': 1. History or philosophy? 2. Scientificity 3. Rule-bound nature of F's own discourse