Kongen hersker, men regerer ikke - Guvernementalitet, statificering og statspraksis hos Michel Foucault

Authors

  • Nicolai von Eggers
  • Mathias Hein Jessen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/sl.v0i66.104224

Keywords:

Michel Foucault, governmentality, Giorgio Agamben, state, problematization

Abstract

Michel Foucault developed his now (in)famous neologism governmentality in the first of the two lectures he devoted to ’a history of governmentality, Security, Territory, Population (1977-78) and The Birth of Biopolitics (1978-79). Foucault developed this notion in order to do a historical investigation of ‘the state’ or ‘the political’ which did not assume the entity of the state but treated it as a way of governing, a way of thinking about governing. Recently, the Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben has taken up Foucault’s notion of governmentality in his writing of a history of power in the West, most notably in The Kingdom and the Glory. It is with inspiration from Agamben’s recent use of Foucault that Foucault’s approach to writing the history of the state (as a history of governmental practices and the reflection hereof) is revisited. Foucault (and Agamben) thus offer another way of writing the history of the state and of the political, which focuses on different texts and on reading more familiar texts in a new light, thereby offering a new and notably different view on the emergence of the modern state and politics.

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Published

2018-03-09

How to Cite

Eggers, N. von, & Jessen, M. H. (2018). Kongen hersker, men regerer ikke - Guvernementalitet, statificering og statspraksis hos Michel Foucault. Slagmark - Tidsskrift for idéhistorie, (66), 89–108. https://doi.org/10.7146/sl.v0i66.104224