Overview
- Is the first English translation of Michel Foucault’s 1971-72 lectures at the Collège de France
- Starts Foucault's analysis of power and penal practices which later led to another key work, Discipline and Punish, in 1975
- Continues Foucault's organisation of history through a study of 'juridical-political frameworks'
Part of the book series: Michel Foucault, Lectures at the Collège de France (MFL)
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Table of contents (13 chapters)
Keywords
About this book
“What characterizes the act of justice is not resort to a court and to judges; it is not the intervention of magistrates (even if they had to be simple mediators or arbitrators). What characterizes the juridical act, the process or the procedure in the broad sense, is the regulated development of a dispute. And the intervention of judges, their opinion or decision, is only ever an episode in this development. What defines the juridical order is the way in which one confronts one another, the way in which one struggles. The rule and the struggle, the rule in the struggle, this is the juridical.”
- Michel Foucault
Penal Theories and Institutions is the title Michel Foucault gave to the lectures he delivered at the Collège de France from November 1971 to March 1972.
In these lectures Michel Foucault presents for the first time his approach to the question of power that will be the focus of his research up to the writing of Disciplineand Punish (1975) and beyond. His analysis starts with a detailed account of Richelieu’s repression of the Nu-pieds revolt (1639-1640) and then goes on to show how the apparatus of power developed by the monarchy on this occasion breaks with the system of juridical and judicial institutions of the Middle Ages and opens out onto a “judicial State apparatus”, a “repressive system”, whose function is focused on the confinement of those who challenge its order.
Michel Foucault systemizes the approach of a history of truth on the basis of the study of “juridico-political matrices” that he had begun in the previous year’s lectures (Lectures on the Will to Know) and which is at the heart of the notion of “knowledge-power”.
In these lectures Foucault develops his theory of justice and penal law.
The appearance of this volume marks the end of the publication of the series Foucault’s courses at the Collège de France (the first volume of which was published in 1997).
Authors and Affiliations
About the author
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Penal Theories and Institutions
Book Subtitle: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1971-1972
Authors: Michel Foucault
Translated by: Graham Burchell
Series Title: Michel Foucault, Lectures at the Collège de France
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-99292-1
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan Cham
eBook Packages: Religion and Philosophy, Philosophy and Religion (R0)
Copyright Information: � �ditions du Seuil/Gallimard 2019
Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-319-99291-4Published: 09 December 2019
eBook ISBN: 978-3-319-99292-1Published: 22 November 2019
Series ISSN: 2947-728X
Series E-ISSN: 2947-7298
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XXIX, 322
Number of Illustrations: 26 b/w illustrations
Topics: Social Philosophy, Philosophy of Law, Philosophy of History, Political Philosophy, Theories of Law, Philosophy of Law, Legal History