From: "David McInerney" <borderlands-AT-optusnet.com.au> Subject: Re: Governmentality School Date: Sun, 25 Jan 2004 16:30:39 +1030 There is a paper by Alan Michberg and Alan Rosenberg, 'Marxism and Governmentality Studies: Towards a Critical Encounter' (Rethinking Marxism, 14:1, Spring 2002, 132-142) that treats 'governmentality studies' as a school. I can't remember the particulars of the paper and I don't have a copy of it. The editors provide the following summary (these are available from the guiford/ingenta website, under the guise of 'table of contents in original format'): "Alan Milchman and Alan Rosenberg prepare the ground for a critical encounter between antiessentialist Marxism (of the sort that RM has long championed) and the governmentality approach inspired by the work of Michel Foucault. Governmentality studies, in brief, represent an attempt to shift the focus of political theory from questions of sovereignty to government: the effort to direct human conduct (which includes, but is not limited to, actions of the state), especially within liberal-democratic societies. For Milchman and Rosenberg, an examination of the 'mechanisms, instruments, procedures, and techniques through which governance is achieved' and the genealogical procedure of 'describing the historically contingent conditions that have produced . . . our prevailing regimes of practices of government' should be of interest to antiessentialist Marxists precisely because they illuminate 'elements of power and rule in modern society' that, until now, Marxism has failed to grasp." Milchman and Rosenberg edited _Martin Heidegger and the Holocaust_ (Prometheus, 1996) and _Foucault and Heidegger: Critical Encounters_ (Uni of Minnesota, 2003). ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ali Rizvi" <ali_m_rizvi-AT-hotmail.com> To: <foucault-AT-lists.village.Virginia.EDU> Sent: Sunday, January 25, 2004 10:51 AM Subject: Governmentality of School > > Hi > > The work of theorists who have studied liberal modes of governance in the > wake of Foucault's > > lectures on governmenatlity and liberal modes of governance are some time > loosely referred to as > > 'governmentality school' (Rose et al). My question is there any recognition > of them as a school in > > any non metaphoric sense and if so does this fact recognised in literature? > Are there any emerging criticism of them as a school? > > Any help or comments greatly appreciated > > regards > ali > > _________________________________________________________________ > Sign-up for a FREE BT Broadband connection today! > http://www.msn.co.uk/specials/btbroadband >
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