ABSTRACT

Michel Foucault’s work is rich with implications and insights concerning spatiality, and has inspired many geographers and social scientists to develop these ideas in their own research. This book, the first to engage Foucault’s geographies in detail from a wide range of perspectives, is framed around his discussions with the French geography journal Hérodote in the mid 1970s. The opening third of the book comprises some of Foucault’s previously untranslated work on questions of space, a range of responses from French and English language commentators, and a newly translated essay by Claude Raffestin, a leading Swiss geographer. The rest of the book presents specially commissioned essays which examine the remarkable reception of Foucault’s work in English and French language geography; situate Foucault’s project historically; and provide a series of developments of his work in the contemporary contexts of power, biopolitics, governmentality and war. Contributors include a number of key figures in social/spatial theory such as David Harvey, Chris Philo, Sara Mills, Nigel Thrift, John Agnew, Thomas Flynn and Matthew Hannah. Written in an open and engaging tone, the contributors discuss just what they find valuable - and frustrating - about Foucault’s geographies. This is a book which will both surprise and challenge.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Space, Knowledge and Power: Foucault and Geography

part 1|4 pages

Questions

part 2|17 pages

Francophone Responses – 1977

chapter 2|2 pages

Hérodote Editorial

chapter 3|3 pages

Response: Jean-Michel Brabant

chapter 4|2 pages

Response: Alain Joxe

chapter 6|3 pages

Response: Michel Riou

part 3|26 pages

Anglophone Responses – 2006

part 6|186 pages

Development

chapter 20|20 pages

Geographies of Governmentality

chapter 25|25 pages

Foucault, Sexuality, Geography

chapter 26|23 pages

The Problem with Empire