2013/2014 KAN-SOC_VFDP Governmentality Paradigms: Diagnosing the Present
English Title | |
Governmentality Paradigms: Diagnosing the Present |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Exam ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Semester |
Course period | Autumn
Changes in course schedule may occur Thursday 09.50-12.25, week 36-41, 43-46 |
Time Table | Please see course schedule at e-Campus |
Max. participants | 100 |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc of Social Science
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Course coordinator | |
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Administration: Karina Ravn Nielsen, 3815 3782, electives.lpf@cbs.dk | |
Main academic disciplines | |
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Last updated on 17-04-2013 |
Learning objectives | |||||||||||||||||||||
Having followed the course, students
are expected to:
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Examination | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content and structure | |||||||||||||||||||||
Over recent decades, Michel
Foucault’s concept of governmentality, concerning the arts,
rationalities and technologies of governing of diverse agencies,
has been developed into a research program and been used across the
social and political sciences. One can distinguish three phases:
Foucault’s lectures on the topic (and some associated French work),
the development of governmentality as an analytical strategy mainly
in Anglo-phonic contexts (UK, Australia, Canada), and the more
recent diffusion and dispersion of the research program
(continental Europe). The latter can take the forms of its
application and development in new fields (e.g. international
relations, security studies, risk, financialisation), its alignment
with other theories and strategies (from post- Marxism to
actor-network theory), or its radical rethinking as initiated by
Giorgio Agamben’s work on the theological genealogy of
government. Some attempts have been made to distinguish
constructivist and realist versions of governmentality studies and
between more or less ‘critical’ versions.
The course aims to be an overview of governmentality as it operates today through a number of paradigms rather than taking it as a canonical form. These paradigms concern such concrete examples as the government of catastrophe, neoliberalism and new forms of finance, event management, and the mass and virtual media and the creation of publics. |
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Teaching methods | |||||||||||||||||||||
Lectures and various forms of student participation as appropriate. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Expected literature | |||||||||||||||||||||
Mitchell Dean (2010) Governmentality:
Power and Rule in Modern Society. Second edition. London: Sage.
Compendium. |
Last updated on
17-04-2013