Foucault by Gilles Deleuze

A concise reading of Foucault’s thought that traces his shift from archaeological analyses of knowledge to genealogical studies of power, showing how power operates not only through sovereign repression but through diffuse disciplinary mechanisms and biopolitical techniques that produce and normalize subjects; it interprets key concepts—the prison, the clinic, the panopticon, power-knowledge and biopower—as interlocking forms of control while arguing that Foucault’s method transforms philosophy by focusing on practices, struggles, and the conditions of possibility for truth and subjectivity.

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