Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish
Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish
Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish
01 INTRODUCTION
Michel Foucault, Jeremy
04 EXAMPLES
Applications in
Bentham contemprorary society
02 SUMMARY
The Birth of the Prison
05 CONCLUSIONS
03 KEY IDEAS
Panopticism, power,
06 QUESTIONS
discipline, surveillance
01
Discipline and Punish is a history of the
modern penal system. Foucault seeks to
analyze punishment in its social context,
and to examine how changing power
relations affected punishment. He begins by
analyzing the situation before the eighteenth
century, when public execution and corporal
punishment were key punishments, and
torture was part of most criminal
investigations.
MICHEL FOUCAULT
History of the Prison
Discipline and Punish, published in 1975, is a
genealogical study of the development of the
“gentler” modern way of imprisoning criminals
rather than torturing or killing them.
01 02 03 04
TO MAKE THE TO SHOW THE EFFECT
SECRET PUBLIC OF INVESTIGATION ON TO REFLECT THE TO ENACT THE
CONFESSION VIOLENCE OF THE REVENGE UPON THE
ORIGINAL CRIME CONVICT'S BODY
Jeremy Bentham
(1748-1832)
Foucault's point is that you can be coerced or
forced to do something by being observed
constantly. Not only do you feel self-conscious, but
your behavior changes. This is an excellent
example of the operation of power: an effect
occurs on your body without physical violence.
VISIBILITY IS A TRAP
Prison, like the psychiatric hospital, marks out and isolates the
"abnormal" or illegal elements of society. In doing this it "creates"
something that can be controlled and which the state can put to various
uses. Foucault does not argue that prison creates crime, merely that
without prisons, crime and the criminal would be perceived in different
ways.
PART FOUR: PRISON
The integration of the prison into The explanation that Foucault gives for the rise
society is an important point. and continued existence of the carceral system
Abolishing the prison is unthinkable centers on illegality: a range of popular
because it is so deeply rooted in behaviors that evade or fall outside the law.
society. In practical terms, Foucault There was a pressing need to control popular
wants to argue that we have revolts and illegality and delinquency was the
developed no viable alternatives: solution. The delinquent was not someone who
theoretically, the discourse of broke a particular law, but part of a group whose
punishment in which we operate very existence implied illegality and crime.
centers on imprisonment.
Foucault's last words suggest the real purpose of this account is not to
inspire rebellion against the modern disciplinary system, but to promote
understanding of its components and operation.
QUESTIONS
There’s a conventional story about how we’ve made
progress in criminal punishment, which evolved brutal and
arbitrary measures to a more humane system with
allowances for handovers and setbacks. In what way does
Foucault challenge this view?
Gutting, Gary, and Johanna Oksala. “Michel Foucault.” Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy,
Stanford University, 5 Aug. 2022, plato.stanford.edu/entries/foucault/#BiogSket.
Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. Vintage Books, 1977.