Discipline,
as described by Foucault in the "Panopticism" chapter of
"Discipline and Punish", is a form of power which operates through
bodies in space. Discipline insures the augmentation of human efficiency:
making it more productive while at the same time more docile and obedient. The
process of disciplination is not conducted through violence or ideology
(in its Marxist sense), but rather through many micro processes of training
and supervision.
Discipline
for Foucault is not embodied in one specific institute (like prison which is
the subject of " Discipline and Punish"), it a "technology
of power" which is utilized by various institutions of power such as
armies, schools, prisons and factories. For Foucault power and discipline are
never something which one has, they are something one does, operates,
wields. Foucault describes the formation of discipline not as a solitary
unite but rather as a collection of practices and techniques which came
together to form a system.
In
Panopticism Foucault attacks the identification of power with the state and the
law, and he offers a much more distributed notion of power as something which
permeates all aspects of life, including the most intimate. In addition, power
for Foucault is not oppressive, but rather productive: it does not stop you
from doing things as much as it causes you to do things. One thing that power
and discipline produce for example is the individual which is a subject with a
sense of choice and independence which is becoming ever more controlled by
power (more on the individual in the next part of the summary).
What's
interesting in discipline for Foucault is the manner in which it operates on
the human body which is the object of power. Discipline in Foucault's account
in Panopticism subordinates the individual body to a mechanism which studies
it, breaks it apart, trains it and reshapes it as a efficient and obedient
body. Discipline does this is several ways, according to Foucault. First,
discipline positions individuals within
hierarchies. Second, discipline breaks down actions in order to gain full
control over each of them. Third, Discipline breaks down time into measurable
units for tasks (you go to work 9-5). Last, discipline according to Foucault
combines the forces of all isolated individuals into one massive force. Discipline,
to conclude, operates on a mass of people by breaking them apart, ranking them,
allocating positions and tasks. In the next part of our summary of Panopticism
we will see how Foucault thinks that discipline produces individuals.
Panopticism / Foucault - summary
Part 1:Foucault's notion of discipline
Part 2: discipline and the production of individuals
Part 3: human sciences
Part 4: disciplinary society
Foucault's panopticism explained
More on and by Foucault:
Foucault's concept of discourse
Foucault on power and knowledge
technology of power
Panopticism / Foucault - summary
Part 1:Foucault's notion of discipline
Part 2: discipline and the production of individuals
Part 3: human sciences
Part 4: disciplinary society
Foucault's panopticism explained
More on and by Foucault:
Foucault's Concept of Heterotopia
Michel Foucault - ""The History of Sexuality"
Michel Foucault - "The Subject and Power"
Foucault - "Of Other Spaces" - summary Michel Foucault - ""The History of Sexuality"
Michel Foucault - "The Subject and Power"
Foucault's concept of discourse
Foucault on power and knowledge
technology of power