Imagining Foucault. On the digital subject and “visual citizenship”

Auteurs-es

  • Susanne Krasmann University of Hamburg, Institute for Criminological Research

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.22439/fs.v0i0.5339

Mots-clés :

egimes of visibility, surveillance, algorithms, refusal

Résumé

One of the most exciting features in Foucault’s work is his analytics of power in terms of forms of visibility. It allows for a reflection on the conditions of seeing and thinking, thus triggering a seemingly paradoxical move: locating the limits of our perspectives entails simultaneously transgressing these limits. In a way, we decipher our own blind spot. Approaching Discipline and Punish through this perspective brings us to identify the digital subject as a characteristic figure of our time. In contrast to its disciplinarian counterpart, it appears to be an active, though not necessarily political subject. The notion of visual citizenship will help us to go a step further and figure out what it could mean to challenge today’s surveilling gaze.

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Publié-e

2017-08-07

Comment citer

Krasmann, S. (2017). Imagining Foucault. On the digital subject and “visual citizenship”. Foucault Studies, (23), 10–26. https://doi.org/10.22439/fs.v0i0.5339

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Special Issue on Discipline and Punish Today