2/01/2007

"Governmentality"

The essay published as “Governmentality” is the second lecture of Foucault’s Collège de France Course Lecture series given in the Winter months of 1978. Foucault titled that lecture series “Security, Territory, and Population” but at the end of the “Governmenality” lecture he already expresses that a better titled would have simply been “Governmentality.” This, then, was the year in which Foucault theorized the modality of governmental power, to be placed alongside of the other modalities of pastoral power, biopower, and disciplinary power.


There are (at least) two related issues the reader faces in grappling with Foucault’s conception of “governmentality.” The first of these concerns the status of Foucault’s concept of power. Is it a historical description of an actual-working modality of power? Is it a philosophical theory of an ideal form of power? Or is it both? Undoubtedly, for Foucault, it would have to be both. But I think there remain serious questions concerning the historical legitimacy of this model. The “Governmentality” lecture is given at times to sweeping historical claims which Foucault barely backs up. This raises questions concerning the historiographical status of Foucault’s genealogy (What is genealogy? How is it practiced? What does it assume? Where does it differ from traditional history?). It also raises questions for Foucault’s readers concerning the ongoing use of his models of power—what historiographical and philosophical adjustments must we make to Foucault’s methodologies and assumptions in order to legitimate the deployment of his various concepts of power?

A second related concern stems from my own interest in trying to deploy Foucault’s concepts of power in the context of my own work in political history, specifically American political history. I am particularly interest in how well Foucault’s work meshes with a very summary account of American liberalism which goes like this: American liberalism can be characterized in terms of a bifurcation of politics into the two opposed realms of public power and private freedom, following on from the quintessential theorization of John Stuart Mill or, more recently, John Rawls and Richard Rorty; the high point of American liberalism thus described was the Progressive Era or, more broadly, the years from the Civil War through the Wilson presidency; American liberalism thus described began to retreat during the Hoover administration, slowly intensified its retreat after the Second World War, and then really began to thoroughly dissipate with the new social movements of the 1960s and 1970s; while public/private liberalism continues to dominate much theoretical and political discourse, liberal political practice today is not very well characterized according to the discursive universe of public versus private power. Regardless of the validity or accuracy of this account (which I would, of course, defend), I am curious specifically how it sits with Foucault’s models and histories of power.

An initial point concerns the genesis of governmentality out of the context of pastoral power, a point which Foucault discusses in the first 1978 Course Lecture, the one immediately prior to “Governmenality”. In his summary for the Course Lectures of that year, Foucault describes the relation thus: “Now, the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries saw a general crisis of the pastorate open up and develop, but in a much more complex fashion: a search for other modes (and not necessarily less strict ones) of spiritual direction and new types of relation between pastor and flock; but also inquiries concerning the right way to ‘govern’ children, a family, a domain, a principality” (EW1, 68). This, then, is the genealogical point of entry of governmental power. The situation is one of “a double movement, then, of state centralization, on the one hand, and of dispersion and religious dissidence, on the other” (EW3, 202). This is a first approximation of the theme of public versus private power, but as Foucault goes on to elaborate “governmentality” the story is much more complex.

Toward the end of the “Governmentality” lecture, Foucault writes: “[I]t is the tactics of government that make possible the continual definition and redefinition of what is within the competence of the state and what is not, the public versus the private, and so on. Thus, the state can only be understood in its survival and its limits on the basis of the general tactics of governmentality” (EW3, 221). Governmentality, then, describes a very general modality of power in which the split between public and private is able to sustain itself. At the same time, it is clear that governmental power, like disciplinary power and biopower, itself transverses the distinction between public and private. This has serious consequences for the liberal practice of dividing public and private spheres. For, if power is exercised often enough on the governmental model, then it will become increasingly clear that power assumes both public and private forms. This will eventually result in the realization that the liberal model of public power versus private freedom is untenable. Power, in other words, is pervasive throughout both public and private domains (this is the crucial Foucauldian point which resonated so well with so many feminists).

Here, then, is one possible way of relating Foucault’s accounts of power to my mini-history of American liberalism offered above. On the sovereign model of power, as outlined in History of Sexuality Volume 1 (pp. 83-85), power essentially contains the split between public and private spheres within itself. So long as power is exercised and theorized on the sovereign model, then, the public versus private split will seem natural. The interesting thing about governmentality, and its correlate forms of power (discipline, biopolitics), is that it is capable of sustaining the public-private split within itself at the same time that the actual powers exercised under governmentality exceed the logic of that split. Eventually, then, power itself starts to run outside of the boundaries of the public/private theory. This is what happened in American liberalism in the social movements of the 1960s and 1970s which very often outstripped the conceptual terms of public versus private (feminism being the primary example). Yet theorists and politicians alike continued to describe power on the sovereign model of public versus private (witness the academic fame of John Rawls’s theory of political justice, which is premised on state versus nonstate dualism). With Foucault comes finally a new model of power, written in the wake of and in response to the failed assumptions of the new social movements (cf. “Truth and Power”, 117 and “The Subject and Power”, 329), which finally enables us to recognize the extent to which our exercises of power transgress the familiar dichotomy of public versus private. We are finally able to recognize that the state, though of importance for politics, is not the only thing of importance in politics: “Maybe what is really important for our modernity… is not so much the statization of society, as the ‘governmentalization’ of the state” (EW3, 220). Governmentality is one of the first moments in this genealogy of the disintegration of public versus private power. It is a complex genealogy, but we have its origins here.

This way of relating Foucault’s account to the summary history of American liberalism is of course in parts very sketchy. One problem is this. It goes against one of Foucault’s explicit warnings to his readers: “We need to see things not in terms of the replacement of a society of sovereignty by a disciplinary society and the subsequent replacement of a disciplinary society by a society of government; in reality one has a triangle, sovereignty-discipline-government” (EW3, 219). Foucault here cautions against the familiar claim that his work demonstrates how sovereign power gradually receded against the in-washing tide of disciplinary (etc.) power, a caution previously sounded, but largely unheard, in his 1976 Course Lectures: “The powers of modern society are exercised through, on the basis of, and by virtue of, this very heterogeneity between a public right of sovereignty and a polymorphous disciplinary mechanism” (“Two Lectures”, 106). The idea, then, is not that discipline-government-biopolitics replace sovereignty, but that they develop alongside of it throughout modernity. This seems to run against my interpretation above.

There are two ways of dealing with this problem and it is unclear which is preferable. The first way consists in massaging the inconsistency. My model of liberalism can admit the persistence of sovereign power, but only in discursive terms. That is, the discourse of sovereign power persists, while the exercise of sovereign power dissipates. This, in fact, is precisely what my model holds and why it is so deeply concerned with the incoherence between official sovereign theories of power and actual non-sovereign (e.g., disciplinary) practices of power. It is doubtful, however, that when Foucault speaks of a persistence of sovereign power, he thinks of this persistence on the level of discourse only and not on the level of the exercise of power. Another way of dealing with the inconsistency between Foucault’s account and mine is simply to deny the historical adequacy of Foucault’s inconsistent claim. This is, of course, a risky strategy. But it is, ultimately, I think advisable. Foucault does not offer a wealth of evidence that sovereign power continues to be an important model for the actual exercise of power in modernity and late modernity. He claims this, but his evidence is fairly thin. In fact, the only evidence he offers in “Governmentality” is the persistence of this theme in the theoretical discourse of Rousseau. What Foucault needs to offer, then, is a more precise historical account of the actual continued functionings of sovereign power. Surely the execution of Damiens the regicide recounted in the opening pages of Discipline and Punish would be an extremely foreign experience for most of we moderns these days. Indeed, one way of reading Discipline and Punish is that it accounts for precisely this distance. In any event, this issue is much too thorny to deal with in a short space. But it is worth considering because it raises all the important historiographical questions mentioned above concerning the assumptions, utility, and efficacy of the genealogical mode of history.

14 comments:

Tomas said...

I found your response really interesting for two reasons. First, I am also interested in the categories of public/private and their genealogy (my point of entry has largely been through feminist critiques of liberalism and/or Habermas, as well as through an attempt to think those categories in nonliberal contexts like the Soviet Union). Your attempt to work them into Foucault’s analytic is a useful starting point that suggests, at the very least, how to begin to answer questions of public/private in Russia. Second, I appreciated the way you try to work with the political theoretical categories, tacking back and forth between Foucault and what you know about American liberalism. After reading it a couple of times I had a few questions for you:


1.
The sovereign modality of power: I am intrigued actually by the first solution you propose to the “sovereign dilemma”—i.e. that we should try to think about not only discursive but also practical exercises of sovereign power. How can we do this? If Foucault can’t help us, would turning to the sovereign mode as the genesis of ongoing juridical features of our society be one way—can we get there through the law, its exercise, and its presumed object, the citizen-subject?

Depsite Foucault’s thin evidence, I would still be more interested in moving away from too narrow a view of sovereign power—as if sovereignty is either a functioning absolutism, or it doesn’t exist at all. Could we, for instance, look to techniques of power still in circulation today that can be viewed as either “survivals” of sovereign power—and perhaps even manifestations of it. At the risk of betraying my very myopic view of political philosophy, some possible examples: the transference from the body of the king to “the people” of the status of sovereignty as in “We the people” and the explicitly political function of the phrase “the American people” in gallup poles and electioneering generally; the constitution of the juridical subject as a passive form of citizenship on whom, in the face of the Law, obligations to the land of the free and the home of the brave are, with practical effects, foisted; and, indeed, the continuing predominance of private property rights as a referent for all kinds of territorial practices in the US, including at the one extreme the pollution of public goods, and at the other, government seizure.

Thus, I wonder if the breakdown you see in the 1960s and 1970s of the public/private binary is actually only a breakdown at the level of theoretical recognition, and that, in practice Foucault’s “complex form of power”—i.e. governmentality—had been in practice and at the level of techniques permeating this supposed boundary and guarantor of negative liberties for a long time. In this view, the 1960s and 1970s would be seen in terms of a recognition of a situation that had been ongoing. By keeping sovereignty in the mix, you also don’t need to rely on strict historicizations, which can force uncomfortable positions. And, seeing Foucault’s triangle of sovereignty-discipline-government as a dynamic relation, where all modalities are operating with different intensities, in different combinations and at different times, opens onto some questions: In the case of public/private, for instance, it helps to see how the sovereign mode of power from which public/private is derived can continue to have effects, even under democratic conditions through the implementation of disciplinary and governmental power. However, I am still not sure whether your very good question about whether this is sovereign power taken as only narrowly discursive has not gone away: how else can we think of sovereign power in action, not merely as part of a juridical formation?

2. A question about the interrelation between governmental, biopower, disciplinary, and pastoral power—you count these as distinct categories; I wonder if this is the way to see it. We seem to agree that pastoral power here figures as a precursor to governmental power. But my reading of disciplinary and biopower would be:

-disciplinary power makes up one of the three points of the triangle of governmentality,
-biopower is a TECHNIQUE OF POWER subsumed by both the governmental (in the form of biopolitics concerned with population) and the disciplinary modes (the anatomo-politics concerned with the human body).
-Thus biopower taken as a whole becomes in this scheme one of the crucial aspects of governmentality—it is one of governmentality’s techniques of power, but not a parallel mode of power.

We could also ask what of biopower as a technique in the sovereign mode? Well, while we don’t have the extreme case of Damiens the regicide, we certainly have an ongoing practice of capital punishment and of the outright suspension of rights in Guantanamo as possible examples for the practice of a sovereign mode of power. This mode still writes its name on the bodies of prisoners—if not in the form of direct inscription a la Kafka, then at least in the form of demeaning photographs meant to force the prisoner to betray his own body and faith at the behest of an infringed sovereignty (i.e. Abu Ghraib).

3. The public/private distinction. There seems to be some slippage in your account of public/private between it as: a. a descriptive category of political theory; b. a normative category of political theory; c. a question of practice and the functioning of power. This might pose a problem of apples and oranges in the analysis. For instance, you juxtapose the exercise of power and the boundaries of theory: “power itself starts to run outside the boundaries of the public/private theory.” One suggestion for your work on bringing American liberalism into dialogue with Foucault would be to follow a more parsimonious treatment of these three, and then to define their relation to the new forms you propose: public and private power. I personally would be very interested in seeing that tricky little tidbit fleshed out.

Colin said...

Thanks for the reply, Tomas. I'll try to muster a response from out of the fog of the painkillers. :)


1. "Depsite Foucault's thin evidence, I would still be more interested in moving away from too narrow a view of sovereign power—as if sovereignty is either a functioning absolutism, or it doesn't exist at all."

I would agree that there is a big risk of having too narrow a definition of sovereignty. And of course sovereignty still does obviously function today. George W. Bush style politics in Iraq and Afghanistan seems to me a good example of the sovereign exercise of power even if that exercise is blended with the kind of governmentality obviously at work in military outsourcing, reconstruction contracts, and restructring of Iraqi society as a supposed model of 'democracy' more generally.

But I would also hedge against defining sovereignty too broadly. Discourses and practice of private property, etc., seem to be better analyzed through the model of disciplinary power or governmentality more broadly in that they seem to be more about 'administrative' matters of organization and ordering than about 'sovereign' matters of direct control. The whole great big bulky engine of capitalism seems to me wrongly appreciated if seen in crass radicalist terms as a means of one class controlling another -- it seems to me more accurately discerned as a means and techniques of ordering and organizing a gigantically complex network of human interactions.


"Thus, I wonder if the breakdown you see in the 1960s and 1970s of the public/private binary is actually only a breakdown at the level of theoretical recognition, and that, in practice Foucault's "complex form of power"—i.e. governmentality—had been in practice and at the level of techniques permeating this supposed boundary and guarantor of negative liberties for a long time. In this view, the 1960s and 1970s would be seen in terms of a recognition of a situation that had been ongoing. By keeping sovereignty in the mix, you also don't need to rely on strict historicizations, which can force uncomfortable positions."

I would tend to agree with this. But then the question becomes "how long had governmentality" really been operative vis-a-vis the sovereign model of power which politics still wore as its mask? Does it go back to the sixteenth century? Or does it go back only to the 1920s? Rather than calling this "relying on strict historicizations" I would argue instead that these precise historical questions are essential for understanding just what our situation is today and how it came to be the way that it is.

My own hunch, which I am barely prepared to defend, is that Foucault is right that governmentality and discipline can be traced back to the sixteenth century. But it seems to me that this kind of tracing is really an academic exercise and one which Foucault was very good at. Governmentality and discipline did not really take hold until the nineteenth century and even then was still in the service of sovereign exercises of power. It was not really until sovereignty exhausted itself in the beginning of the 20c. that discipline etc. began to crowd out the older form of power. I believe that historical inquiry would show this. But I hardly take myself to have shown it here.


"2. A question about the interrelation between governmental, biopower, disciplinary, and pastoral power—you count these as distinct categories; I wonder if this is the way to see it. We seem to agree that pastoral power here figures as a precursor to governmental power. But my reading of disciplinary and biopower would be:
-disciplinary power makes up one of the three points of the triangle of governmentality,
-biopower is a TECHNIQUE OF POWER subsumed by both the governmental (in the form of biopolitics concerned with population) and the disciplinary modes (the anatomo-politics concerned with the human body).
-Thus biopower taken as a whole becomes in this scheme one of the crucial aspects of governmentality—it is one of governmentality's techniques of power, but not a parallel mode of power."


I'm not sure I would characterize biopower in that sense. It seems that as described in Hist Sexualitiy v1 biopower is a modality of power right alongside of disciplinary power described in Disc&Pun. Both are modalities of power. Or, if you want to call them techniques, then both have to be techniques.

I'm not sure what is at stake in this discussion, though, so I wonder if it is fair to ask you: 1) What is the importance of the difference between a mode of power and a technique of power? 2) More importantly, what is to be gained by situating discipline on one of these levels (mode) and biopower on another (technique)? Whatever you refer to them as, why situate discipline and biopower differently? What problems does that solve for Foucault? Or for us?

Also I'm curious how others take Foucault to be relating discipline to biopower? Any thoughts or first impressions?


"3. The public/private distinction. There seems to be some slippage in your account of public/private between it as: a. a descriptive category of political theory; b. a normative category of political theory; c. a question of practice and the functioning of power. This might pose a problem of apples and oranges in the analysis. For instance, you juxtapose the exercise of power and the boundaries of theory: "power itself starts to run outside the boundaries of the public/private theory." One suggestion for your work on bringing American liberalism into dialogue with Foucault would be to follow a more parsimonious treatment of these three, and then to define their relation to the new forms you propose: public and private power. I personally would be very interested in seeing that tricky little tidbit fleshed out."

This criticism is very very welcome and I think you have hit on a very deep concern of mine -- and a point that remains deeply ambiguous in my own thinking.

Part of the problem is that we very much lack a definitive account of the public/private pair these days. These terms are operative everywhere, but they operate in different ways in different contexts. Different uses are even, in different contexts, incompatible (for (some) capitalists "private" refers to the domain of business vis-a-vis state while for (some) feminists "private" refers to the domain of domesticity vis-a-vis business). It is not that some uses are wrong and others are right. It is that this term is multilayered and so widely used that we lack a strict hold on it -- probably, however, this is a good thing.

I agree that it also operates in different ways as you suggest (normative, descriptive, practical(?)). I don't always keep this different uses separate in my own work and that definitely leads to problems. I also think that there is a definite slippage in the "practical" existence of the public/private pair and the "theoretical" discourse of power -- for my claim above is that as 'public/private' practices of power have been receding for some decades now, political theorists very often tend to not recognize this claim and go on writing as if public/private is still the heart of liberal democratic power practices, which it is not. What is the lesson to be learned? That political theory needs to catch up with the last fifty years of political history. I think Foucault can help us do that.

Tomas said...

Colin-

Thanks much for your replies, and the discussion. It's nice to be getting down to the brass tacks! I'm going to abstain from a lengthy blog response in the event someone else wants in (which I hope they do!).

In brief, though, I like what you said about historicization and its importance. Also, the questions you asked of me of what are the stakes in the discussion of biopower/discipline are well put. In fact, I'm not sure that there is more to it on my side (at least at the onset) other than analytic clarity. But of course that clarity can then serve more, shall we say, critical functions. Nonetheless, I'm going to think about that one and get back to you. Finally, on "private/public"--have you read Timothy Mitchell's piece, "The Limits of the State"? There he talks not about public/private, but about state/society drawing on Foucault. He handles this so-called "distinction" in a very convincing way, seeing it, rather, as an "effect of detailed processes of spatial organization, temporal arrangement, functional specification, and supervision and surveillance, which create the appearance of a world fundamentally divided into state and society." Thus, the line between state and society can't be located. On the other hand, the distinction is *not* a mere fiction. On the contrary, it is a highly *productive* distinction. Further, it is a distinction produced and reproduced by the political order that is consequential. Can looking not for the dividing line, but rather at the way the line is produced at different points serve as some traction out of the public/private quagmire?

Colin said...

Thanks for the reference to the Timothy Mitchell article which I did not know of, but have now read.

I agree with you that this is a more productive strategy. Mitchell seems to me to be advocating neither simply affirming or denying the state/society distinction. Rather, he looks at the way that the distinction is internally produced within a given, what, culture? (He is unclear here.) I would agree that this approach is portable to public/private. It is not that the public and the private are simply given as two separate spheres. Yet neither is the distinction a myth such that everything is "really" public or "really" private. Rather, the distinction is produced internally within liberal cultures in a way that has real effects. I agree with you that looking at how the distinction is produced, as well as what those effects are, is a better strategy than trying to pin down the distinction itself (if I understand you correctly). In my own work, one of the most crucial consequences which I trace out of the distinction is that of political complacency. It may seem a bit of a stretch, and I need to think more about it, but I think there is alot to go on there, at least for now.

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