Michel Foucault was often asked: Was he a Marxist? A structuralist? A liberal? An anarchist? His answer was typically the same: no. He resisted all labels—not out of coyness, but as a matter of principle. For Foucault, to affiliate with a grand theory was to risk dogma. It meant locking thought into a framework, rendering it less responsive to the complexities of the real.
He once said: “Do you think I have worked like a dog all these years to say the same thing and not be changed?”
This refusal is more than intellectual eccentricity—it is an ethical stance. In a world hungry for ideology, Foucault practiced something rarer: a philosophy of method without a metaphysics.
Ideology as a Trap
Ideology, in the classical sense, refers to systems of thought that explain the world and propose how it should be. These systems—whether religious, political, or scientific—offer structure, identity, and certainty. But Foucault was wary of their gravitational pull.
He argued that ideology often masks itself as truth. It stabilizes power while pretending to critique it. A theory that starts as liberation can end as orthodoxy. Marxism, psychoanalysis, liberalism—all offer insights, but they also tend to impose explanatory frameworks that demand allegiance.
Foucault preferred a kind of mobile skepticism: not denying that power and oppression exist, but refusing to nest them in a totalizing narrative.
The Toolbox Approach
Rather than building a system, Foucault offered what he called “toolboxes.” His works were not sacred texts to be memorized, but instruments to be used. You might pick up Discipline and Punish to analyze prisons, or The History of Sexuality to critique identity politics. The point was not to believe in Foucault, but to think with him.
This approach is deeply pragmatic. It allows for flexibility, experimentation, and context. It does not demand fidelity to a party line. It does not offer comfort. But it respects the unpredictability of thought.
Rethinking Political Engagement
Foucault’s skepticism led some to accuse him of nihilism. If there is no ideology to stand on, how can one act politically? His answer was: start where you are. Engage in “local struggles.” Analyze the micro-operations of power in institutions, language, and everyday life.
This is what he called the work of the “specific intellectual”—someone who acts not from abstract principles but from concrete involvement. Rather than dream of utopia, the specific intellectual intervenes in systems, questions assumptions, disrupts certainties.
It’s less glamorous than revolution, perhaps. But more honest.
A Humble Radicalism
Foucault’s resistance to dogma is a form of humility. It acknowledges that every position is partial, every truth contingent, every critique vulnerable to co-optation. But this is not a call to despair. It is a call to vigilance.
To think without dogma is to remain open—to contradiction, to revision, to the unexpected. It is to treat thought not as a fortress, but as a field.
In a time when ideological camps harden and discourse collapses into slogans, Foucault’s example is a quiet provocation. He reminds us that the most radical thing we can do might be to keep thinking—even when it’s easier to believe.
More about Foucault:
Michel Foucaul - ""The History of Sexuality"Michel Foucault: Panopticism - Summary
Foucault's Panopticism explained
Michel Foucault and Marxism
Foucault, Structuralism and post-structuralism
Truth and Power / Foucault
Michel Foucault - The Discourse on Language