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Foucault and Liberal Political Economy: Power, Knowledge, and Freedom

Online ISBN:
9780197690550
Print ISBN:
9780197690529
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

Foucault and Liberal Political Economy: Power, Knowledge, and Freedom

Mark Pennington
Mark Pennington

Professor of Political Economy and Public Policy

KIngs' College, University of London
, Professor of Political Economy and Public Policy, Department of Political Economy,
UK
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Published online:
14 April 2025
Published in print:
16 June 2025
Online ISBN:
9780197690550
Print ISBN:
9780197690529
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

This book is the first to comprehensively engage the ideas of the French social theorist and philosopher Michel Foucault from within the tradition of liberal political economy. The first part demonstrates important commonalities between Foucault’s ideas and those of a neglected ‘postmodern’ stream in liberal political thought. These ideas draw on a social theory emphasising a culturally situated individualism; a philosophy of science highly sceptical of socio-economic ‘scientism’ and ‘expert rule’; and an understanding of freedom as an open-ended process of ‘self-creation’ in the face of cultural power relations—a freedom threatened by alignments between state power and more decentred manifestations of power. Part II deploys the tools of Foucault’s critical social theory and those of a postmodern liberalism to problematise four separate though overlapping ‘bio-political’ or ‘pastoral’ dispositifs in contemporary societies focused on social justice, public health, ecological sustainability, and law and order. Where the Foucauldian and the postmodern liberal approaches point towards the value of a cultural and economic ‘creative destruction’ that destabilises existing modes of thought and ways of being, the pastoral dispositifs that seek to ‘monitor and correct’ multiple pattern anomalies are shown to stifle the space for that creative freedom. Though the book does not engage the question of whether Foucault himself moved towards endorsing liberal political economy, it throws considerable light on how key Foucauldian concerns may be addressed within the liberal tradition and why Foucauldians may have reason to embrace a reconstituted or postmodern liberalism.

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