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Analysis: A Macat Analysis of Michel Foucault's Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison

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Analysis: A Macat Analysis of Michel Foucault's Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison

By: Meghan Kallman, Rachele Dini
Narrated by: Macat.com
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About this listen

How do those in power exercise that power over a state's citizens? French thinker Michel Foucault's 1975 work Discipline and Punish looks to answer this question by investigating the prison system. Foucault does not believe that the modern-day system developed out of reformers' humanitarian concerns. He argues that prison both created and then became part of a bigger system of surveillance that extends throughout society.

Power is no longer exerted directly through violence. Prisoners who were once executed are now far more likely to be monitored and controlled. And the fear of being constantly watched leads prisoners to self-regulate; to behave in ways those in power approve of. This insidious method has moved way beyond the bounds of the prison walls. It is now a part of many aspects of our lives, inflicted on us in many places. Surveillance - or systematic monitoring - by government institutions produces "docile bodies," which Foucault defines as bodies that can be monitored and psychologically controlled, and that are then trained to self-govern. We have become the sum of what we abstain from doing for fear of being seen, judged, or punished.

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Makes Foucault accessible

This was a really useful book in helping me understand the work of Foucault. I listened to it first and then bought the paperback so I could listen again whilst annotating. I highly recommend it. It introduced me to a range of views, opinions and uses of Foucault. A highly intelligent man.

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Scam

I have bought this audiobook twice, and it keeps disappearing from my library. It is not the only book that has vanished from my library. Audible is a joke.

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This book is a rip off

I am upset - this was a waste of a credit. You misleadingly suggest that the book is a summary about Foucault's book but it's more about his life...I am not interested in his sexuality which is mentioned three times but the content of the book. Narrator can read but that's about it.

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3 people found this helpful