Panopticism begins at 39:35, though this whole episode is worth watching. Thought I would timestamp that in case anyone is here for class or assigned reading.
Thanks David. This was really excellent. I’m already a patron of yours on patreon and your clear explanations are really valuable and appreciated. Cheers
I am writing an essay for college on this particular topic. I will be focusing on this book, alongside "The Subject and Power" and "the punitive society". This video was so helpful to get a better understanding of Foucault's approach, thank you so much!!
watched half of this and had to restart so i could annotate my copy of the book alongside listening to your great explanations !! thank you for sharing :)
It seems obvious (to me, at any rate) that Foucault intended readers to see the applicability of much what he says in this book to the academic systems that many inhabit. If so, to be too explicit about this might be to bite the hand feeds. It's interesting to watch the classic British television series The Prisoner (1967-68) with Foucault in mind.
Thanks David. A phenomenal series you have created here.
Thank you so much! You are WAY too generous!!
Panopticism begins at 39:35, though this whole episode is worth watching. Thought I would timestamp that in case anyone is here for class or assigned reading.
THANKS!
Thanks David. This was really excellent. I’m already a patron of yours on patreon and your clear explanations are really valuable and appreciated. Cheers
Very cool as always. Congrats on a milestone of 100 videos!
I am writing an essay for college on this particular topic. I will be focusing on this book, alongside "The Subject and Power" and "the punitive society". This video was so helpful to get a better understanding of Foucault's approach, thank you so much!!
watched half of this and had to restart so i could annotate my copy of the book alongside listening to your great explanations !! thank you for sharing :)
Thank you so much for this video
Panopticon ends at 53:02
carceral starts at 1:05
thank you so so so so much
It seems obvious (to me, at any rate) that Foucault intended readers to see the applicability of much what he says in this book to the academic systems that many inhabit. If so, to be too explicit about this might be to bite the hand feeds.
It's interesting to watch the classic British television series The Prisoner (1967-68) with Foucault in mind.
The disciplines and the punishments are similar in construction. However, he didn't want to call these good or bad, but "positive" as "productive".
Yeee