Using Foucault's Methods by Gary Wickham, Gavin Kendall

Using Foucault's Methods



Download Using Foucault's Methods




Using Foucault's Methods Gary Wickham, Gavin Kendall ebook
Format: pdf
Publisher:
ISBN: 0761957170, 9780761957171
Page: 171


Number of articles, and now i feel confident in starting to say some things about them. The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge. In both of these works, Foucault never discusses using certain methods of speaking or stylistic choices (like vivid language) to take up more “space” in the audience's mind. The mainstay of the book is not concerned with this narrow area, however, but its pre-history, in the sense of the academic discourses which preceded its very existence. Download Using Foucault's Methods. The book is organized around the following themes: history, archaeology, genealogy and discourse as the cornerstones of Foucault's methods; and science and culture as important objects of analysis for those using Foucault's methods. What happens to the concept of transparency if you look at it using Foucault's methods? Some notes made on reading Kendall, G. Using Foucault's Methods Gary Wickham, Gavin Kendall Language: English Page: 171. Kendall dan Wickham menjelaskan genealogy sebagai 'a new concern with the analysis of power' (1999:29). Foucault worked in a variety of scientific fields, with his greatest claim to fame being a simple mechanical method for proving the rotation of the Earth—what came to be known as Foucault's Pendulum. I am not yet foucault, though i thught reading the book "using foucault's methods" would transform me. On Sun, 16 Sep 2007 11:52:33 +0200 "Frank Ejby Poulsen" wrote: > I am a French native speaker currently writing in English an "archaeology" > of a political idea using Foucault's method. Increasing transparency seems to go hand in hand with the information age, but how far should it go? Using Foucault's Methods by Gary Wickham, Gavin Kendall. The history of software engineering will be explored through a practical application of Michel Foucault's “genealogical” method, using documents located in Canadian and American archives and museums. Through the term 'archaeology', Foucault describes a method which is neither “neither formalising nor interpretive”,[wherein discourse is positive since it the only way we can access the thought of our preceding thinkers.