Focault's Notion of Power and Current Psychiatric Practice

Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 19 (1):49-58 (2012)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

Underlying Foucault’s accounts of asylums, hospitals, prisons, and schools was a continuing concern with power and knowledge. In the field of mental health, his preoccupation with power relations and the construction of narratives of exclusion and repression in the History of Madnesshave led many scholars to consider Foucault an anti-psychiatrist. They question the book’s historical data, which prioritize power relations and political analysis over the actual experience of doctors and patients, undermining its scientific worth. Even thinkers sympathetic to Foucault’s ideas argue that, despite the cultural discontinuities that he sought to foreground in his historical analysis, he nevertheless offered a continuous narrative of confinement and exclusion as a result of the oppressive powers of reason. But for Foucault, power is not unilateral, dominant, and oppressive, but distributional. Power is not a substance or a property one can claim to possess. It is not a political structure, a government or a dominant social class. Power is mobile, unstable, and reversible and is not blind but is determined by an internal logic. There is a form of rationality behind the exercise of power, and when that form of rationality is undermined, power loses its foundations. This can be observed in current forms of psychiatric practice, where psychiatric power is in fact being undermined while apparently being ever more closely inscribed in social practices.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 93,612

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Focault, the Logic of Psychiatric Power, and Its Paradoxes.John Iliopoulos - 2012 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 19 (1):67-69.
Psychiatric Power and Its Reversals: Can We Keep Practice Humane?Miles Clapham - 2012 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 19 (1):63-65.
From Resistance to Government.Paul Patton - 2013 - In Christopher Falzon, Timothy O'Leary & Jana Sawicki (eds.), A Companion to Foucault. Malden Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 172–188.
Power, Resistance, and Freedom.Jon Simons - 2013 - In Christopher Falzon, Timothy O'Leary & Jana Sawicki (eds.), A Companion to Foucault. Malden Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 299–319.
Foucault's Normative Epistemology.Linda Martín Alcoff - 2013 - In Christopher Falzon, Timothy O'Leary & Jana Sawicki (eds.), A Companion to Foucault. Malden Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 205–225.
From madness to mental illness! Psychiatry and biopolitics in Michel Foucault.Federico Leoni - 2013 - In K. W. M. Fulford, Martin Davies, Richard Gipps, George Graham, John Sadler, Giovanni Stanghellini & Tim Thornton (eds.), The Oxford handbook of philosophy and psychiatry. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 85.

Analytics

Added to PP
2013-12-01

Downloads
41 (#112,661)

6 months
6 (#1,472,471)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?