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Showing 71 - 80 results out of 100 for 'development'
By  Bar tender, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts, On July 29, 2008
Views: 422
Main Category: Anatomy
Tags: Respiratory 
By  Bar tender, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts, On July 29, 2008
Views: 639
Main Category: Anatomy
Tags: urinary 
By  Wendell Borton, Dominican University of California, California, On November 5, 2008
Views: 274
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By  Bar tender, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts, On July 31, 2008
Views: 521
Main Category: Environmental Studies
By  OCW Sciences, On July 25, 2008
Views: 403
Main Category: ASP / ASP .NET
Tags: .NET ASP 
By  Bar tender, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts, On September 19, 2008
Views: 405
Main Category: Finance
Tags: Estate Flexibility Real 
By  Ryan Gittins, On November 23, 2008
Marking a major development in Foucault's thinking, this book derives from the lecture course which he gave at the Collège de France between January and April, 1978. Taking as his starting point the notion of "bio-power," introduced in his 1976 course Society Must be Defended, Foucault sets out to study the foundations of this new technology of power over population. Distinct from punitive, disciplinary systems, the mechanisms of power are here finely entwined with the technologies of security, and it is to 18th century developments of these technologies with which the first chapters of the book are concerned. By the fourth lecture however Foucault's attention turns, focusing on a history of "governmentality" from the first centuries of the Christian era to the emergence of the modern nation state. As Michel Sennelart explains in his afterword, the effect of this change of direction is to "shift the center of gravity of the lectures from the question of biopower to that of government, to such an extent that the former almost entirely eclipses the former ..." Consequently, in light of Foucault's later work, it is tempting to see these lectures as the moment of a radical turning point at which the transition to the problematic of the "government of self and others" would begin.
Views: 3941
Main Category: Social Sciences
By  Wendell Borton, Dominican University of California, California, On November 5, 2008
Views: 312
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