James
Wong, Waterloo Ontario (Canada): Foucault
and Autonomy
Abstract: In this paper, I argue against Mark BevirŐs contention
that Foucault is committed to reject autonomy but affirms agency. I argue that
BevirŐs claim is extravagant, that (a) Foucault need not reject autonomy, and
(b) the rejection of autonomy flies in the face of the emphasis Foucault placed
on autonomy in his late work. Central to my argument is the distinction between
autonomy as self-sufficiency and autonomy as self-rule. By deploying Harry
FrankfurtŐs structural account of identification, I show that FoucaultŐs
discussion of autonomy in his late work is best understood as self-rule. Such
an interpretation has the virtue of not adopting the counter-intuitive view
that Foucault is committed to reject autonomy. By way of conclusion, I explore
how such a concept of autonomy as self-rule figures in FoucaultŐs project of
self-formation in his late work.
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