Repetition and Ethics in Late Foucault

Abstract

Normalization and Totalization

By the early 1980s, after more than two decades of producing provocative studies on topics ranging from madness to biopower, Michel Foucault came to the conclusion that modernity is marked by an increasingly efficient integration of normalized individuals into totalizing networks. “Never, I think, in the history of human societies—even in the old Chinese society—has there been such a tricky combination in the same political structures of individualization techniques, and of totalization processes.”3 There no longer seemed to be a substantial “exterior” to modernity, and traditional political critique was already caught within and could only further the

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