Towards an Analytic of Violence: Foucault, Arendt & Power

Violence is an often used but much less theoretically discussed word, even among Foucauldian scholars, with Johanna Oksala being a notable exception. However, she limits her definition of violence to physical forms. In this article, I seek to overcome the quandaries she poses for wide-ranging defini...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inFoucault studies no. 25; pp. 120 - 145
Main Author Maze, Jacob
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published CBS Open Journals 22.10.2018
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Violence is an often used but much less theoretically discussed word, even among Foucauldian scholars, with Johanna Oksala being a notable exception. However, she limits her definition of violence to physical forms. In this article, I seek to overcome the quandaries she poses for wide-ranging definitions of violence by incorporating Arendt’s critique of violence into a Foucauldian paradigm. While some work, though not a great deal, has been done on comparing Arendt and Foucault, I highlight some points of commonality that makes Arendtian violence accessible to Foucauldian scholars that mostly rest on the concept of freedom. If power is productive to the extent that it provides the potential to act otherwise, Arendt, in many ways, situates violence as the prevention of this, similar to Foucault’s account of domination. Violence and power are therefore cast in a symbiotic relationship, not limited to physicality, whereby power produces meaning as well as the ability to act and violence is projected as preventive; in such a scenario, the push for freedom can be positioned as a second-order normative claim.
ISSN:1832-5203
1832-5203
DOI:10.22439/fs.v0i25.5577