Foucault’s Empire of the Free

This essay argues that the engagement with Greece and Rome after The Will to Knowledge allowed Foucault to bring clarity to his conception of limited freedom in complex societies. The Classical fulfilled this function paradoxically by being jarringly different from and integral to the discourses of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Foucault Studies
Main Author: Richard Alston
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CBS Open Journals 2017-01-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://192.168.7.24:443/index.php/foucault-studies/article/view/5246
_version_ 1850277444485906432
author Richard Alston
author_facet Richard Alston
author_sort Richard Alston
collection DOAJ
container_title Foucault Studies
description This essay argues that the engagement with Greece and Rome after The Will to Knowledge allowed Foucault to bring clarity to his conception of limited freedom in complex societies. The Classical fulfilled this function paradoxically by being jarringly different from and integral to the discourses of modern sexuality. Foucault’s engagement with the Classical in The Use of Pleasure and The Care of the Self continued his established method of uncovering the development of a discourse, or set of discourses, over time. He thereby demonstrated the historical specificity of understandings of sexuality and the self. It follows that if the ancient self was a historical construct, then the modern self must also be such. But Foucault’s Classical engagement leads him to an innovative position in which the disciplinary dynamics of ancient self-knowledge offer a practical philosophy. Foucault’s Greek philosophy could have effects through two related mechanisms: the care of the self through askesis (discipline) and the speaking of truth to power through parresia (free speech). Through the rigors of askesis, the self can be rendered an object of analysis and hence a critical position external to the self can be achieved. Externality allows the philosopher to exercise parresia since the constraints of society have been surpassed and consequently offers a prospect of agency and a measure of freedom. The second part of the essay questions the extent of that freedom by reading Foucault against Tacitus, particularly the Agricola and the mutinies episode in the Annales. These episodes show the limitations of parresia and how parresia is bound into the workings of imperial power (and not a position external to that power). In the Tacitean model, externality is a viable political stance (achieved by Agricola), but is problematic ethically. The essay concludes by contrasting Foucauldian and Tacitean models of historical change. 
format Article
id doaj-art-d8209beec8d849cd89dcc84b05aefe8f
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 1832-5203
language English
publishDate 2017-01-01
publisher CBS Open Journals
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-d8209beec8d849cd89dcc84b05aefe8f2025-08-19T23:40:33ZengCBS Open JournalsFoucault Studies1832-52032017-01-012210.22439/fs.v0i0.5246Foucault’s Empire of the FreeRichard Alston0Royal Holloway, University of London This essay argues that the engagement with Greece and Rome after The Will to Knowledge allowed Foucault to bring clarity to his conception of limited freedom in complex societies. The Classical fulfilled this function paradoxically by being jarringly different from and integral to the discourses of modern sexuality. Foucault’s engagement with the Classical in The Use of Pleasure and The Care of the Self continued his established method of uncovering the development of a discourse, or set of discourses, over time. He thereby demonstrated the historical specificity of understandings of sexuality and the self. It follows that if the ancient self was a historical construct, then the modern self must also be such. But Foucault’s Classical engagement leads him to an innovative position in which the disciplinary dynamics of ancient self-knowledge offer a practical philosophy. Foucault’s Greek philosophy could have effects through two related mechanisms: the care of the self through askesis (discipline) and the speaking of truth to power through parresia (free speech). Through the rigors of askesis, the self can be rendered an object of analysis and hence a critical position external to the self can be achieved. Externality allows the philosopher to exercise parresia since the constraints of society have been surpassed and consequently offers a prospect of agency and a measure of freedom. The second part of the essay questions the extent of that freedom by reading Foucault against Tacitus, particularly the Agricola and the mutinies episode in the Annales. These episodes show the limitations of parresia and how parresia is bound into the workings of imperial power (and not a position external to that power). In the Tacitean model, externality is a viable political stance (achieved by Agricola), but is problematic ethically. The essay concludes by contrasting Foucauldian and Tacitean models of historical change.  https://192.168.7.24:443/index.php/foucault-studies/article/view/5246parresiaaskesisselffreedomimperialismTacitus
spellingShingle Richard Alston
Foucault’s Empire of the Free
parresia
askesis
self
freedom
imperialism
Tacitus
title Foucault’s Empire of the Free
title_full Foucault’s Empire of the Free
title_fullStr Foucault’s Empire of the Free
title_full_unstemmed Foucault’s Empire of the Free
title_short Foucault’s Empire of the Free
title_sort foucault s empire of the free
topic parresia
askesis
self
freedom
imperialism
Tacitus
url https://192.168.7.24:443/index.php/foucault-studies/article/view/5246
work_keys_str_mv AT richardalston foucaultsempireofthefree