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The History of Sexuality

The History of Sexuality (French: L'Histoire de la sexualité) is a four-volume study of sexuality in the Western world by the French historian and philosopher Michel Foucault, in which the author examines the emergence of "sexuality" as a discursive object and separate sphere of life and argues that the notion that every individual has a sexuality is a relatively recent development in Western societies. The first volume, The Will to Knowledge (La volonté de savoir), was first published in 1976; an English translation appeared in 1978. The Use of Pleasure (L'usage des plaisirs), and The Care of the Self (Le souci de soi), were published in 1984. The fourth volume, Confessions of the Flesh (Les aveux de la chair), was published posthumously in 2018.

The History of Sexuality
Cover of the first edition of volume 1
AuthorMichel Foucault
Original titleHistoire de la sexualité
TranslatorRobert Hurley
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
SubjectHistory of human sexuality
PublisherÉditions Gallimard
Publication date
1976 (vol. 1)
1984 (vol. 2)
1984 (vol. 3)
2018 (vol. 4)
Published in English
1978 (vol. 1)
1985 (vol. 2)
1986 (vol. 3)
2021 (vol. 4)[1]
Media typePrint (Hardcover and Paperback)
Pages168 (English ed., vol. 1)
293 (English ed., vol. 2)
279 (English ed., vol. 3)
416 (English ed., vol. 4)
ISBN0-14-012474-8 (vol. 1)
0-14-013734-5 (vol. 2)
0-14-013735-1 (vol. 3)
978-1-52-474803-6 (vol. 4)

In Volume 1, Foucault criticizes the "repressive hypothesis", the idea that western society suppressed sexuality from the 17th to the mid-20th century due to the rise of capitalism and bourgeois society. Foucault argues that discourse on sexuality in fact proliferated during this period, during which experts began to examine sexuality in a scientific manner, encouraging people to confess their sexual feelings and actions. According to Foucault, in the 18th and 19th centuries society took an increasing interest in sexualities that did not fit within the marital bond: the "world of perversion" that includes the sexuality of children, the mentally ill, the criminal and the homosexual, while by the 19th century, sexuality was being readily explored both through confession and scientific enquiry. In Volume 2 and Volume 3, Foucault addresses the role of sex in Greek and Roman antiquity.

The book received a mixed reception, with some reviewers praising it and others criticizing Foucault's scholarship.[2]

Volume I: The Will to Knowledge

Part I: We "Other Victorians"

In Part One, Foucault discusses the "repressive hypothesis", the widespread belief among late 20th-century westerners that sexuality, and the open discussion of sex, was socially repressed during the late 17th, 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries, a by-product of the rise of capitalism and bourgeois society, before the partial liberation of sexuality in modern times. Arguing that sexuality was never truly repressed, Foucault asks why modern westerners believe the hypothesis, noting that in portraying past sexuality as repressed, it provides a basis for the idea that in rejecting past moral systems, future sexuality can be free and uninhibited, a "...garden of earthly delights".[3] The title of the section is inspired by Steven Marcus's book The Other Victorians: A Study of Sexuality and Pornography in Mid-Nineteenth-Century England.

Part II: The Repressive Hypothesis

We must... abandon the hypothesis that modern industrial societies ushered in an age of increased sexual repression. We have not only witnessed a visible explosion of unorthodox sexualities; but – and this is the important point – a deployment quite different from the law, even if it is locally dependent on procedures of prohibition, has ensured, through a network of interconnecting mechanisms, the proliferation of specific pleasures and the multiplication of disparate sexualities.

— Foucault, 1976.[4]

In Part Two, Foucault notes that from the 17th century to the 1970s, there had actually been a "...veritable discursive explosion" in the discussion of sex, albeit using an "...authorized vocabulary" that codified where one could talk about it, when one could talk about it, and with whom. He argues that this desire to talk so enthusiastically about sex in the western world stems from the Counter-Reformation, when the Roman Catholic Church called for its followers to confess their sinful desires as well as their actions. As evidence for the obsession of talking about sex, he highlights the publication of the book My Secret Life, anonymously written in the late 19th century and detailing the sex life of a Victorian gentleman. Indeed, Foucault states that at the start of the 18th century, there was an emergence of "...a political, economic, and technical incitement to talk about sex,"...with self-appointed experts speaking both moralistically and rationally on sex, the latter sort trying to categorize it. He notes that in that century, governments became increasingly aware that they were not merely having to manage "subjects" or "a people" but a "population", and that because of this they had to concern themselves with such topics as birth and death rates, marriage, and contraception, thereby increasing their interest and changing their discourse on sexuality.[5]

Foucault argues that prior to the 18th century, discourse on sexuality focuses on the productive role of the married couple, which is monitored by both canonical and civil law. In the 18th and 19th centuries, he argues, society ceases discussing the sex lives of married couples, instead taking an increasing interest in sexualities that did not fit within this union; the "world of perversion" that includes the sexuality of children, the mentally ill, the criminal and the homosexual. He notes that this had three major effects on society. Firstly, there was increasing categorization of these "perverts"; where previously a man who engaged in same-sex activities would be labeled as an individual who succumbed to the sin of sodomy, now they would be categorised into a new "species," that of homosexual. Secondly, Foucault argues that the labeling of perverts conveyed a sense of "pleasure and power" on to both those studying sexuality and the perverts themselves. Thirdly, he argues that bourgeois society exhibited "blatant and fragmented perversion," readily engaging in perversity but regulating where it could take place.[6]

Part III: Scientia Sexualis

In part three, Foucault explores the development of the scientific study of sex, the attempt to unearth the "truth" of sex, a phenomenon which Foucault argues is peculiar to the West. In contrast to the West's sexual science, Foucault introduces the ars erotica, which he states has only existed in Ancient and Eastern societies. Furthermore, he argues that this scientia sexualis has repeatedly been used for political purposes, being utilized in the name of "public hygiene" to support state racism. Returning to the influence of the Catholic confession, he looks at the relationship between the one confessing and the authoritarian figure that he confesses to, arguing that as Roman Catholicism was eclipsed in much of Western and Northern Europe following the Reformation, the concept of confession survived and became more widespread, entering into the relationship between parent and child, patient and psychiatrist and student and educator. By the 19th century, he maintains, the "truth" of sexuality was being readily explored both through confession and scientific enquiry. Foucault proceeds to examine how the confession of sexuality then comes to be "constituted in scientific terms," arguing that scientists begin to trace the cause of all aspects of human psychology and society to sexual factors.[7]

Part IV: The Deployment of Sexuality

In part four, Foucault explores the question as to why western society wishes to seek for the "truth" of sex. Foucault argues that we need to develop an "analytics" of power through which to understand sex. Highlighting that power controls sex by laying down rules for others to follow, he discusses how power demands obedience through domination, submission, and subjugation, and also how power masks its true intentions by disguising itself as beneficial. As an example, he highlights the manner in which the feudal absolute monarchies of historical Europe, themselves a form of power, disguised their intentions by claiming that they were necessary to maintain law, order, and peace. As a leftover concept from the days of feudalism, Foucault argues that westerners still view power as emanating from law, but he rejects this, proclaiming that we must "...construct an analytics of power that no longer takes law as a model and a code," and announcing that a different form of power governs sexuality. "We must," Foucault states, "at the same time conceive of sex without the law, and power without the king."[8]

Foucault explains that he does not mean power as the domination or subjugation exerted on society by the government or the state. Rather, power should be understood "as the multiplicity of force relations immanent in the sphere in which they operate." In this way, he argues, "Power is everywhere . . . because it comes from everywhere," emanating from all social relationships and being imposed throughout society bottom-up rather than top-down. Foucault criticizes Wilhelm Reich, writing that while an important "historico-political" critique of sexual repression formed around Reich, "the very possibility of its success was tied to the fact that it always unfolded within the deployment of sexuality, and not outside or against it." According to Foucault, that sexual behavior in western societies was able to change in many ways "without any of the promises or political conditions predicted by Reich being realized" demonstrates that the "antirepressive" struggle is "a tactical shift and reversal in the great deployment of sexuality."[9]

Part V: Right of Death and Power over Life

In part five, Foucault asserts that the motivations for power over life and death have changed. As in feudal times the "right to life" was more or less a "right to death" because sovereign powers were able to decide when a person died. This has changed to a "right to live," as sovereign states are more concerned about the power of how people live. Power becomes about how to foster life. For example, a state decides to execute someone as a safe guard to society not as justified, as it once was, as vengeful justice. This new emphasis on power over life is called Biopower and comes in two forms. First, Foucault says it is "centered on the body as a machine: its disciplining, the optimization of its capabilities, the extortion of its forces, the parallel increase of its usefulness and its docility, its integration into systems of efficient and economic controls."[10] The second form, Foucault argues, emerged later and focuses on the "species body, the body imbued with the mechanics of life and serving as the basis of the biological processes: propagation, births and mortality, the level of health, life expectancy and longevity, with all the conditions that cause these to vary."[10] Biopower, it is argued, is the source of the rise of capitalism, as states became interested in regulating and normalizing power over life and not as concerned about punishing and condemning actions.

Volume II: The Use of Pleasure

In this volume, Foucault discusses "the manner in which sexual activity was problematized by philosophers and doctors in classical Greek culture of the fourth century B. C.".[11] Exploring works of Greek philosophers such as Seneca, Xenophon, Plato, and many more, Foucault explains the aim of this volume to unravel the process of the structuralization of sexuality as an ethical practice in Greek culture.[12] To do so, the book inspects four Greek practices: dietetics to understand the relation of the self with the body, economics as the management of marriage and households, erotics to explore the codes of conduct between men and boys, and finally, the understanding of true love in philosophy. For Foucault, this exploration of Greek practices illustrates an "history of the desiring subject", which is crucial for understanding the modern construction of sexuality.[13]

Volume III: The Care of the Self

In this volume, Foucault discusses texts such as the Oneirocritica, (The Interpretation of Dreams), of Artemidorus. Other authors whose work is discussed include Galen, Plutarch, and Pseudo-Lucian. Foucault describes the Oneirocritica as a "point of reference" for his work, one that exemplifies a common way of thinking.[14]

Volume IV: Confessions of the Flesh

In this draft version of the fourth volume, published and translated after his death, Foucault traces the adoption and adaptation by early Christian societies of earlier pre-Christian ideas of pleasure. He discusses Saint Augustine of Hippo.

Publication history

Three volumes of The History of Sexuality were published before Foucault's death in 1984. The first volume, The Will to Knowledge (previously known as An Introduction in English—Histoire de la sexualité, 1: la volonté de savoir in French) was published in France in 1976, and translated in 1977, focusing primarily on the last two centuries, and the functioning of sexuality as an analytics of power related to the emergence of a science of sexuality, and the emergence of biopower in the West. The work was a further development of the account of the interaction of knowledge and power Foucault provided in Discipline and Punish (1975).[15]

According to Arnold Davidson, the back cover of the first volume announced that there would be five forthcoming volumes: Volume 2, The Flesh and the Body, would "concern the prehistory of our modern experience of sexuality, concentrating on the problematization of sex in early Christianity"; Volume 3, The Children's Crusade, would discuss "the sexuality of children, especially the problem of childhood masturbation"; Volume 4, Woman, Mother, Hysteric, would discuss "the specific ways in which sexuality had been invested in the female body"; Volume 5, Perverts, was "planned to investigate exactly what the title named"; and Volume 6, Population and Races, was to examine "the way in which treatises, both theoretical and practical, on the topics of population and race were linked to the history" of "biopolitics." Foucault subsequently abandoned this plan.[16]

The second two volumes, The Use of Pleasure (Histoire de la sexualité, II: l'usage des plaisirs) and The Care of the Self (Histoire de la sexualité, III: le souci de soi) dealt with the role of sex in Greek and Roman antiquity. The latter volume deals considerably with the ancient technological development of the hypomnema which was used to establish a permanent relationship to oneself. Both were published in 1984, the year of Foucault's death, the second volume being translated in 1985, and the third in 1986.

The fourth volume, Confessions of the Flesh was published posthumously in 2018 despite Foucault explicitly disallowing posthumous publication of his works,[17] and was published in English for the first time by Penguin in Feb 2021, translated by Robert Hurley who had translated Penguin's earlier volumes in the series, and was released straight into their Penguin Classics imprint. The work first became available to researchers when both handwritten and typed manuscripts of Confessions of the Flesh were sold by Daniel Defert, Foucault's partner, to the National Library of France in 2013 as part of the Foucault archive. Foucault's family decided that as the material was already partially accessible, it should be published for everyone to read.[18]

In his lecture series from 1979 to 1980 Foucault extended his analysis of government to its "...wider sense of techniques and procedures designed to direct the behaviour of men", which involved a new consideration of the "...examination of conscience" and confession in early Christian literature. These themes of early Christian literature seemed to dominate Foucault's work, alongside his study of Greek and Roman literature, until the end of his life. The planned fourth volume of The History of Sexuality was accordingly entitled Confessions of the Flesh (Les aveux de la chair), addressing Christianity. However, Foucault's death left the work incomplete, and the publication was delayed due to the restrictions of Foucault's estate.[19] The volume was almost finished at the time of his death, and a copy was held in the Foucault archive. It was edited and finally published in February 2018.[20]

Reception

The reception of The History of Sexuality among scholars and academics has been mixed.

Scientific and academic journals

The cultural anthropologist and sociologist Stephen O. Murray wrote in the Archives of Sexual Behavior that a passage of The History of Sexuality in which Foucault discussed how European medical discourse of the late 19th century had classified homosexuals had "clouded the minds" of many social historical theorists and researchers, who had produced a "voluminous discourse" that ignored how homosexuals had been classified before the late 19th century or non-European cultures.[21] The philosopher Alan Soble wrote in the Journal of Sex Research that The History of Sexuality "caused a thunderstorm among philosophers, historians, and other theorists of sex". He credited Foucault with inspiring "genealogical" studies "informed by the heuristic idea that not only are patterns of sexual desire and behavior socially engineered ... but also that the concepts of our sexual discourse are equally socially constructed" and with influencing "gender studies, feminism, Queer Theory, and the debate about the resemblance and continuity, or lack of it, between ancient and contemporary homoeroticism". He credited Simone de Beauvoir with anticipating Foucault's view that patterns of sexual desire and behavior are socially determined.[22]

Evaluations in books, 1976–1989

The historian Jane Caplan called The History of Sexuality "certainly the most ambitious and interesting recent attempt to analyse the relations between the production of concepts and the history of society in the field of sexuality", but criticized Foucault for using an "undifferentiated concept" of speech and an imprecise notion of "power".[23] The gay rights activist Dennis Altman described Foucault's work as representative of the position that homosexuals emerged as a social category in 18th and 19th century western Europe in The Homosexualization of America (1982).[24] The feminist Germaine Greer wrote that Foucault rightly argues that, "what we have all along taken as the breaking-through of a silence and the long delayed giving of due attention to human sexuality was in fact the promotion of human sexuality, indeed, the creation of an internal focus for the individual's preoccupations."[25] The historian Peter Gay wrote that Foucault is right to raise questions about the "repressive hypothesis", but that "his procedure is anecdotal and almost wholly unencumbered by facts; using his accustomed technique (reminiscent of the principle underlying Oscar Wilde's humor) of turning accepted ideas upside down, he turns out to be right in part for his private reasons."[26] The philosopher José Guilherme Merquior suggested in Foucault (1985) that Foucault's views about sexual repression are preferable to those of Reich, Herbert Marcuse, and their followers in that they have provide more accurate descriptions and that Foucault is supported by "the latest historiographic research on bourgeois sex". Merquior considered the second two volumes of The History of Sexuality to be of higher scholarly quality than the first, and found Foucault to be "original and insightful" in his discussion of the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius and other Stoics in The Care of the Self. However, he found the details of Foucault's views open to question, and suggested that Foucault's discussion of Greek pederasty is less illuminating than that of Kenneth Dover, despite Foucault's references to Dover's Greek Homosexuality (1978).[27]

The philosopher Roger Scruton rejected Foucault's claim that sexual morality is culturally relative in Sexual Desire (1986). He also criticized Foucault for assuming that there could be societies in which a "problematisation" of the sexual did not occur. Scruton concluded that, "No history of thought could show the 'problematisation' of sexual experience to be peculiar to certain specific social formations: it is characteristic of personal experience generally, and therefore of every genuine social order."[28] The philosopher Peter Dews argued in Logics of Disintegration that Foucault's rejection of the repressive hypothesis is more apparent than real, and that the hypothesis is not "abolished, but simply displaced" in The History of Sexuality, as shown for example by Foucault's persistent references to "the body and its pleasures" and to ars erotica.[29] The classicist Page duBois called The Use of Pleasure "one of the most exciting new books" in classical studies and "an important contribution to the history of sexuality", but added that Foucault "takes for granted, and thus 'authorizes,' exactly what needs to be explained: the philosophical establishment of the autonomous male subject".[30] The historian Patricia O'Brien wrote that Foucault was "without expertise" in dealing with antiquity, and that The History of Sexuality lacks the "methodological rigor" of Foucault's earlier works, especially Discipline and Punish.[31]

Evaluations in books, 1990–present

The philosopher Judith Butler argued in Gender Trouble (1990) that the theory of power Foucault expounds in the first volume of The History of Sexuality is to some extent contradicted by Foucault's subsequent discussion of the journals of Herculine Barbin, a 19th-century French intersex person: whereas in the former work Foucault asserts that sexuality is coextensive with power, in Herculine Barbin he "fails to recognize the concrete relations of power that both construct and condemn Herculine's sexuality", instead romanticizing Barbin's world of pleasure as the "happy limbo of a non-identity", and expressing views akin to those of Marcuse. Butler further argued that this conflict is evident within The History of Sexuality, noting that Foucault refers there to "bucolic" and "innocent" sexual pleasures that exist prior to the imposition of "regulative strategies".[32]

The classicist David M. Halperin claimed in One Hundred Years of Homosexuality (1990) that the appearance of the English translation of the first volume of Foucault's work in 1978, together with the publication of Dover's Greek Homosexuality the same year, marked the beginning of a new era in the study of the history of sexuality.[33] He suggested that The History of Sexuality may be the most important contribution to the history of western morality since Friedrich Nietzsche's On the Genealogy of Morality (1887).[34] The critic Camille Paglia rejected Halperin's views, calling The History of Sexuality a "disaster". Paglia wrote that much of The History of Sexuality is fantasy unsupported by the historical record, and that it "is acknowledged even by Foucault's admirers to be his weakest work".[35] The economist Richard Posner described The History of Sexuality as, "a remarkable fusion of philosophy and intellectual history" in Sex and Reason (1992), adding that the book is lucidly written.[36]

Diana Hamer wrote in the anthology The Sexual Imagination From Acker to Zola (1993) that The History of Sexuality is Foucault's best-known work on sexuality.[37] The historian Michael Mason wrote that in The History of Sexuality, Foucault presents what amounts to an argument "against the possibility of making historical connections between beliefs about sex and sexual practices", but that the argument is only acceptable if one accepts the need to shift attention from "sexuality" to "sex" in thinking about the sexual culture of the last three centuries, and that Foucault does not make a case for such a need.[38] The critic Alexander Welsh criticized Foucault for failing to place Sigmund Freud in the context of 19th century thought and culture.[39] The classicist Walter Burkert called Foucault's work the leading example of the position that sexuality takes different forms in different civilizations and is therefore a cultural construct.[40] The historian Roy Porter called The History of Sexuality, "a brilliant enterprise, astonishingly bold, shocking even, in its subversion of conventional explanatory frameworks, chronologies, and evaluations, and in its proposed alternatives." Porter credited Foucault with discrediting the view, proposed for example by Marcuse in Eros and Civilization (1955), that "industrialization demanded erotic austerity."[41] The philosopher Martha Nussbaum wrote that the claim that homosexuality is a cultural construction is associated more with Foucault's The History of Sexuality than with any other work.[42]

The classicist Bruce Thornton wrote that The Use of Pleasure was, "usually quite readable, surveying the ancient evidence to make some good observations about the various techniques developed to control passion", but faulted Foucault for limiting his scope to "fourth-century medical and philosophical works".[43] The philosopher Arnold Davidson wrote that while "Foucault's interpretation of the culture of the self in late antiquity is sometimes too narrow and therefore misleading", this is a defect of "interpretation" rather than of "conceptualization." Davidson argued that, "Foucault's conceptualization of ethics as the self's relationship to itself provides us with a framework of enormous depth and subtlety" and "allows us to grasp aspects of ancient thought that would otherwise remain occluded."[44]

The psychoanalyst Joel Whitebook argued that while Foucault proposes that "bodies and pleasures" should be the rallying point against "the deployment of sexuality", "bodies and pleasures", like other Foucauldian terms, is a notion with "little content." Whitebook, who endorsed Dews' assessment of Foucault's work, found Foucault's views to be comparable to those of Marcuse and suggested that Foucault was indebted to Marcuse.[45] In 2005, Scruton dismissed The History of Sexuality as "mendacious", and called his book Sexual Desire (1986) an answer to Foucault's work.[46] Romana Byrne criticized Foucault's argument that the scientia sexualis belongs to modern Western culture while the ars erotica belongs only to Eastern and Ancient societies, arguing that a form of ars erotica has been evident in Western society since at least the eighteenth century.[47]

Scruton wrote in 2015 that, contrary to Foucault's claims, the ancient texts Foucault examines in The Use of Pleasure are not primarily about sexual pleasure. Nevertheless, he found the second two volumes of The History of Sexuality more scholarly than Foucault's previous work. Scruton concluded, of the work in general, that it creates an impression of a "normalized" Foucault: "His command of the French language, his fascination with ancient texts and the by-ways of history, his flamboyant imagination and beautiful style - all have been put, at last, to a proper use, in order to describe the human condition respectfully, and to cease to look for the secret 'structures' beneath its smile."[48]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Confessions of the Flesh by Michel Foucault". Penguin Random House. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  2. ^ The idea that sexuality, including homosexuality, is a social construction is associated more with The History of Sexuality than with any other work.[citation needed]
  3. ^ Foucault 1976. pp. 1–14.
  4. ^ Foucault 1976. p. 49.
  5. ^ Foucault 1976. pp. 15–36.
  6. ^ Foucault 1976. pp. 37–49.
  7. ^ Foucault 1976. pp. 53–73.
  8. ^ Foucault 1976. p. 77–91.
  9. ^ Foucault 1976. pp. 92–102, 131.
  10. ^ a b Foucault 1976. p. 139.
  11. ^ Foucault 1984. p. 12.
  12. ^ Foucault, Michel (1988–1990). The history of sexuality. Robert Hurley (Vintage books ed.). New York. p. 245. ISBN 0-679-72469-9. OCLC 5102034.
  13. ^ Foucault, Michel (1988–1990). The history of sexuality. Robert Hurley (Vintage books ed.). New York. p. 5. ISBN 0-679-72469-9. OCLC 5102034.
  14. ^ Foucault 1984. pp. 3-240.
  15. ^ Bernasconi 2005. p. 310.
  16. ^ Davidson 2003. p. 125.
  17. ^ Flood, Alison (12 February 2018). "'Key' fourth book of Foucault's History of Sexuality published in France". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  18. ^ Libbey, Peter (8 February 2018). "Michel Foucault's Unfinished Book Published in France". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  19. ^ Foucault 1999. pp. 34, 47
  20. ^ "Les aveux de la chair - Bibliothèque des Histoires - GALLIMARD - Site Gallimard". www.gallimard.fr.
  21. ^ Murray 1995. pp. 623-624.
  22. ^ Soble 2009. p. 118.
  23. ^ Caplan 1981. p. 165.
  24. ^ Altman 1982. p. 48.
  25. ^ Greer 1985. p. 198.
  26. ^ Gay 1985. pp. 468-9.
  27. ^ Merquior 1991. pp. 121-2, 132, 135-6.
  28. ^ Scruton 1994. pp. 34, 362.
  29. ^ Dews 2007. p. 205.
  30. ^ duBois 1988. p. 2.
  31. ^ O'Brien 1989. p. 42.
  32. ^ Butler 2007. pp. 127-8, 131.
  33. ^ Halperin 1990. p. 4.
  34. ^ Halperin 1990. p. 62.
  35. ^ Paglia 1993. p. 187.
  36. ^ Posner 1992. p. 23.
  37. ^ Hamer 1993. p. 92.
  38. ^ Mason 1995. pp. 172-3.
  39. ^ Welsh 1994. p. 128.
  40. ^ Burkert 1996. pp. 17, 191.
  41. ^ Porter 1996. pp. 248, 252.
  42. ^ Nussbaum 1997. pp. 27, 39.
  43. ^ Thornton 1997. p. 246.
  44. ^ Davidson 2003. p. 130.
  45. ^ Whitebook 2003. pp. 335, 337-8.
  46. ^ Scruton 2005. p. 55.
  47. ^ Byrne 2013. pp. 1-4.
  48. ^ Scruton 2015. pp. 112-3.

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  • Miller, James (1993). The Passion of Michel Foucault. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0671695507.
  • Mills, Sara (2004). Michel Foucault. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415245692.
  • Nussbaum, Martha (1997). Estlund, David M.; Nussbaum, Martha C. (eds.). Sex, Preference, and Family: Essays on Law and Nature. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Bibcode:1998spf..book.....E. ISBN 978-0-19-509894-5.
  • O'Brien, Patricia (1989). Hunt, Lynn (ed.). The New Cultural History. London: University of California. ISBN 978-0-520-06429-4.
  • Paglia, Camille (1993). Sex, Art, and American Culture: Essays. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-017209-6.
  • Posner, Richard (1992). Sex and Reason. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-80279-7.
  • Porter, Roy (1996). Keddie, Nikki R. (ed.). Debating Gender, Debating Sexuality. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-4655-4.
  • Scruton, Roger (2015). Fools, Frauds and Firebrands. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-4081-8733-3.
  • Scruton, Roger (2005). Gentle Regrets: Thoughts from a Life. New York: Continuum. ISBN 978-0-8264-8033-0.
  • Scruton, Roger (1994). Sexual Desire: A Philosophical Investigation. London: Phoenix. ISBN 978-1-85799-100-0.
  • Smart, Barry (2002). Michel Foucault. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415285339.
  • Thornton, Bruce S. (1997). Eros: The Myth of Ancient Greek Sexuality. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-3226-0.
  • Welsh, Alexander (1994). Freud's Wishful Dream Book. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-03718-9.
  • Whitebook, Joel (2003). Gutting, Gary (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Foucault, Second Edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-60053-8.
Journals
  • Foucault, Michel (1982). "The Subject and Power". Critical Inquiry. 8 (4): 777–795. doi:10.1086/448181. S2CID 55355645.
  • Murray, Stephen O. (1995). "Southwest Asian and North African Terms for Homosexual Roles". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 24 (6): 623–629. doi:10.1007/bf01542184. PMID 8572911. S2CID 26194957.
  • Soble, Alan (2009). "A History of Erotic Philosophy". Journal of Sex Research. 46 (2/3): 104–120. doi:10.1080/00224490902747750. PMID 19308838. S2CID 22332883.  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)

External links

  • Summaries of the book: [1] [2]
  • Previews of the original French editions: La volonté de savoir, La volonté de savoir (Google Books)

history, sexuality, history, article, history, human, sexuality, documentary, series, history, french, histoire, sexualité, four, volume, study, sexuality, western, world, french, historian, philosopher, michel, foucault, which, author, examines, emergence, se. For the history article see History of human sexuality For the documentary TV series see The History of Sex The History of Sexuality French L Histoire de la sexualite is a four volume study of sexuality in the Western world by the French historian and philosopher Michel Foucault in which the author examines the emergence of sexuality as a discursive object and separate sphere of life and argues that the notion that every individual has a sexuality is a relatively recent development in Western societies The first volume The Will to Knowledge La volonte de savoir was first published in 1976 an English translation appeared in 1978 The Use of Pleasure L usage des plaisirs and The Care of the Self Le souci de soi were published in 1984 The fourth volume Confessions of the Flesh Les aveux de la chair was published posthumously in 2018 The History of SexualityCover of the first edition of volume 1AuthorMichel FoucaultOriginal titleHistoire de la sexualiteTranslatorRobert HurleyCountryFranceLanguageFrenchSubjectHistory of human sexualityPublisherEditions GallimardPublication date1976 vol 1 1984 vol 2 1984 vol 3 2018 vol 4 Published in English1978 vol 1 1985 vol 2 1986 vol 3 2021 vol 4 1 Media typePrint Hardcover and Paperback Pages168 English ed vol 1 293 English ed vol 2 279 English ed vol 3 416 English ed vol 4 ISBN0 14 012474 8 vol 1 0 14 013734 5 vol 2 0 14 013735 1 vol 3 978 1 52 474803 6 vol 4 In Volume 1 Foucault criticizes the repressive hypothesis the idea that western society suppressed sexuality from the 17th to the mid 20th century due to the rise of capitalism and bourgeois society Foucault argues that discourse on sexuality in fact proliferated during this period during which experts began to examine sexuality in a scientific manner encouraging people to confess their sexual feelings and actions According to Foucault in the 18th and 19th centuries society took an increasing interest in sexualities that did not fit within the marital bond the world of perversion that includes the sexuality of children the mentally ill the criminal and the homosexual while by the 19th century sexuality was being readily explored both through confession and scientific enquiry In Volume 2 and Volume 3 Foucault addresses the role of sex in Greek and Roman antiquity The book received a mixed reception with some reviewers praising it and others criticizing Foucault s scholarship 2 Contents 1 Volume I The Will to Knowledge 1 1 Part I We Other Victorians 1 2 Part II The Repressive Hypothesis 1 3 Part III Scientia Sexualis 1 4 Part IV The Deployment of Sexuality 1 5 Part V Right of Death and Power over Life 2 Volume II The Use of Pleasure 3 Volume III The Care of the Self 4 Volume IV Confessions of the Flesh 5 Publication history 6 Reception 6 1 Scientific and academic journals 6 2 Evaluations in books 1976 1989 6 3 Evaluations in books 1990 present 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 External linksVolume I The Will to Knowledge EditPart I We Other Victorians Edit In Part One Foucault discusses the repressive hypothesis the widespread belief among late 20th century westerners that sexuality and the open discussion of sex was socially repressed during the late 17th 18th 19th and early 20th centuries a by product of the rise of capitalism and bourgeois society before the partial liberation of sexuality in modern times Arguing that sexuality was never truly repressed Foucault asks why modern westerners believe the hypothesis noting that in portraying past sexuality as repressed it provides a basis for the idea that in rejecting past moral systems future sexuality can be free and uninhibited a garden of earthly delights 3 The title of the section is inspired by Steven Marcus s book The Other Victorians A Study of Sexuality and Pornography in Mid Nineteenth Century England Part II The Repressive Hypothesis Edit We must abandon the hypothesis that modern industrial societies ushered in an age of increased sexual repression We have not only witnessed a visible explosion of unorthodox sexualities but and this is the important point a deployment quite different from the law even if it is locally dependent on procedures of prohibition has ensured through a network of interconnecting mechanisms the proliferation of specific pleasures and the multiplication of disparate sexualities Foucault 1976 4 In Part Two Foucault notes that from the 17th century to the 1970s there had actually been a veritable discursive explosion in the discussion of sex albeit using an authorized vocabulary that codified where one could talk about it when one could talk about it and with whom He argues that this desire to talk so enthusiastically about sex in the western world stems from the Counter Reformation when the Roman Catholic Church called for its followers to confess their sinful desires as well as their actions As evidence for the obsession of talking about sex he highlights the publication of the book My Secret Life anonymously written in the late 19th century and detailing the sex life of a Victorian gentleman Indeed Foucault states that at the start of the 18th century there was an emergence of a political economic and technical incitement to talk about sex with self appointed experts speaking both moralistically and rationally on sex the latter sort trying to categorize it He notes that in that century governments became increasingly aware that they were not merely having to manage subjects or a people but a population and that because of this they had to concern themselves with such topics as birth and death rates marriage and contraception thereby increasing their interest and changing their discourse on sexuality 5 Foucault argues that prior to the 18th century discourse on sexuality focuses on the productive role of the married couple which is monitored by both canonical and civil law In the 18th and 19th centuries he argues society ceases discussing the sex lives of married couples instead taking an increasing interest in sexualities that did not fit within this union the world of perversion that includes the sexuality of children the mentally ill the criminal and the homosexual He notes that this had three major effects on society Firstly there was increasing categorization of these perverts where previously a man who engaged in same sex activities would be labeled as an individual who succumbed to the sin of sodomy now they would be categorised into a new species that of homosexual Secondly Foucault argues that the labeling of perverts conveyed a sense of pleasure and power on to both those studying sexuality and the perverts themselves Thirdly he argues that bourgeois society exhibited blatant and fragmented perversion readily engaging in perversity but regulating where it could take place 6 Part III Scientia Sexualis Edit In part three Foucault explores the development of the scientific study of sex the attempt to unearth the truth of sex a phenomenon which Foucault argues is peculiar to the West In contrast to the West s sexual science Foucault introduces the ars erotica which he states has only existed in Ancient and Eastern societies Furthermore he argues that this scientia sexualis has repeatedly been used for political purposes being utilized in the name of public hygiene to support state racism Returning to the influence of the Catholic confession he looks at the relationship between the one confessing and the authoritarian figure that he confesses to arguing that as Roman Catholicism was eclipsed in much of Western and Northern Europe following the Reformation the concept of confession survived and became more widespread entering into the relationship between parent and child patient and psychiatrist and student and educator By the 19th century he maintains the truth of sexuality was being readily explored both through confession and scientific enquiry Foucault proceeds to examine how the confession of sexuality then comes to be constituted in scientific terms arguing that scientists begin to trace the cause of all aspects of human psychology and society to sexual factors 7 Part IV The Deployment of Sexuality Edit In part four Foucault explores the question as to why western society wishes to seek for the truth of sex Foucault argues that we need to develop an analytics of power through which to understand sex Highlighting that power controls sex by laying down rules for others to follow he discusses how power demands obedience through domination submission and subjugation and also how power masks its true intentions by disguising itself as beneficial As an example he highlights the manner in which the feudal absolute monarchies of historical Europe themselves a form of power disguised their intentions by claiming that they were necessary to maintain law order and peace As a leftover concept from the days of feudalism Foucault argues that westerners still view power as emanating from law but he rejects this proclaiming that we must construct an analytics of power that no longer takes law as a model and a code and announcing that a different form of power governs sexuality We must Foucault states at the same time conceive of sex without the law and power without the king 8 Foucault explains that he does not mean power as the domination or subjugation exerted on society by the government or the state Rather power should be understood as the multiplicity of force relations immanent in the sphere in which they operate In this way he argues Power is everywhere because it comes from everywhere emanating from all social relationships and being imposed throughout society bottom up rather than top down Foucault criticizes Wilhelm Reich writing that while an important historico political critique of sexual repression formed around Reich the very possibility of its success was tied to the fact that it always unfolded within the deployment of sexuality and not outside or against it According to Foucault that sexual behavior in western societies was able to change in many ways without any of the promises or political conditions predicted by Reich being realized demonstrates that the antirepressive struggle is a tactical shift and reversal in the great deployment of sexuality 9 Part V Right of Death and Power over Life Edit In part five Foucault asserts that the motivations for power over life and death have changed As in feudal times the right to life was more or less a right to death because sovereign powers were able to decide when a person died This has changed to a right to live as sovereign states are more concerned about the power of how people live Power becomes about how to foster life For example a state decides to execute someone as a safe guard to society not as justified as it once was as vengeful justice This new emphasis on power over life is called Biopower and comes in two forms First Foucault says it is centered on the body as a machine its disciplining the optimization of its capabilities the extortion of its forces the parallel increase of its usefulness and its docility its integration into systems of efficient and economic controls 10 The second form Foucault argues emerged later and focuses on the species body the body imbued with the mechanics of life and serving as the basis of the biological processes propagation births and mortality the level of health life expectancy and longevity with all the conditions that cause these to vary 10 Biopower it is argued is the source of the rise of capitalism as states became interested in regulating and normalizing power over life and not as concerned about punishing and condemning actions Volume II The Use of Pleasure EditIn this volume Foucault discusses the manner in which sexual activity was problematized by philosophers and doctors in classical Greek culture of the fourth century B C 11 Exploring works of Greek philosophers such as Seneca Xenophon Plato and many more Foucault explains the aim of this volume to unravel the process of the structuralization of sexuality as an ethical practice in Greek culture 12 To do so the book inspects four Greek practices dietetics to understand the relation of the self with the body economics as the management of marriage and households erotics to explore the codes of conduct between men and boys and finally the understanding of true love in philosophy For Foucault this exploration of Greek practices illustrates an history of the desiring subject which is crucial for understanding the modern construction of sexuality 13 Volume III The Care of the Self EditIn this volume Foucault discusses texts such as the Oneirocritica The Interpretation of Dreams of Artemidorus Other authors whose work is discussed include Galen Plutarch and Pseudo Lucian Foucault describes the Oneirocritica as a point of reference for his work one that exemplifies a common way of thinking 14 Volume IV Confessions of the Flesh EditIn this draft version of the fourth volume published and translated after his death Foucault traces the adoption and adaptation by early Christian societies of earlier pre Christian ideas of pleasure He discusses Saint Augustine of Hippo Publication history EditThree volumes of The History of Sexuality were published before Foucault s death in 1984 The first volume The Will to Knowledge previously known as An Introduction in English Histoire de la sexualite 1 la volonte de savoir in French was published in France in 1976 and translated in 1977 focusing primarily on the last two centuries and the functioning of sexuality as an analytics of power related to the emergence of a science of sexuality and the emergence of biopower in the West The work was a further development of the account of the interaction of knowledge and power Foucault provided in Discipline and Punish 1975 15 According to Arnold Davidson the back cover of the first volume announced that there would be five forthcoming volumes Volume 2 The Flesh and the Body would concern the prehistory of our modern experience of sexuality concentrating on the problematization of sex in early Christianity Volume 3 The Children s Crusade would discuss the sexuality of children especially the problem of childhood masturbation Volume 4 Woman Mother Hysteric would discuss the specific ways in which sexuality had been invested in the female body Volume 5 Perverts was planned to investigate exactly what the title named and Volume 6 Population and Races was to examine the way in which treatises both theoretical and practical on the topics of population and race were linked to the history of biopolitics Foucault subsequently abandoned this plan 16 The second two volumes The Use of Pleasure Histoire de la sexualite II l usage des plaisirs and The Care of the Self Histoire de la sexualite III le souci de soi dealt with the role of sex in Greek and Roman antiquity The latter volume deals considerably with the ancient technological development of the hypomnema which was used to establish a permanent relationship to oneself Both were published in 1984 the year of Foucault s death the second volume being translated in 1985 and the third in 1986 The fourth volume Confessions of the Flesh was published posthumously in 2018 despite Foucault explicitly disallowing posthumous publication of his works 17 and was published in English for the first time by Penguin in Feb 2021 translated by Robert Hurley who had translated Penguin s earlier volumes in the series and was released straight into their Penguin Classics imprint The work first became available to researchers when both handwritten and typed manuscripts of Confessions of the Flesh were sold by Daniel Defert Foucault s partner to the National Library of France in 2013 as part of the Foucault archive Foucault s family decided that as the material was already partially accessible it should be published for everyone to read 18 In his lecture series from 1979 to 1980 Foucault extended his analysis of government to its wider sense of techniques and procedures designed to direct the behaviour of men which involved a new consideration of the examination of conscience and confession in early Christian literature These themes of early Christian literature seemed to dominate Foucault s work alongside his study of Greek and Roman literature until the end of his life The planned fourth volume of The History of Sexuality was accordingly entitled Confessions of the Flesh Les aveux de la chair addressing Christianity However Foucault s death left the work incomplete and the publication was delayed due to the restrictions of Foucault s estate 19 The volume was almost finished at the time of his death and a copy was held in the Foucault archive It was edited and finally published in February 2018 20 Reception EditThe reception of The History of Sexuality among scholars and academics has been mixed Scientific and academic journals Edit The cultural anthropologist and sociologist Stephen O Murray wrote in the Archives of Sexual Behavior that a passage of The History of Sexuality in which Foucault discussed how European medical discourse of the late 19th century had classified homosexuals had clouded the minds of many social historical theorists and researchers who had produced a voluminous discourse that ignored how homosexuals had been classified before the late 19th century or non European cultures 21 The philosopher Alan Soble wrote in the Journal of Sex Research that The History of Sexuality caused a thunderstorm among philosophers historians and other theorists of sex He credited Foucault with inspiring genealogical studies informed by the heuristic idea that not only are patterns of sexual desire and behavior socially engineered but also that the concepts of our sexual discourse are equally socially constructed and with influencing gender studies feminism Queer Theory and the debate about the resemblance and continuity or lack of it between ancient and contemporary homoeroticism He credited Simone de Beauvoir with anticipating Foucault s view that patterns of sexual desire and behavior are socially determined 22 Evaluations in books 1976 1989 Edit The historian Jane Caplan called The History of Sexuality certainly the most ambitious and interesting recent attempt to analyse the relations between the production of concepts and the history of society in the field of sexuality but criticized Foucault for using an undifferentiated concept of speech and an imprecise notion of power 23 The gay rights activist Dennis Altman described Foucault s work as representative of the position that homosexuals emerged as a social category in 18th and 19th century western Europe in The Homosexualization of America 1982 24 The feminist Germaine Greer wrote that Foucault rightly argues that what we have all along taken as the breaking through of a silence and the long delayed giving of due attention to human sexuality was in fact the promotion of human sexuality indeed the creation of an internal focus for the individual s preoccupations 25 The historian Peter Gay wrote that Foucault is right to raise questions about the repressive hypothesis but that his procedure is anecdotal and almost wholly unencumbered by facts using his accustomed technique reminiscent of the principle underlying Oscar Wilde s humor of turning accepted ideas upside down he turns out to be right in part for his private reasons 26 The philosopher Jose Guilherme Merquior suggested in Foucault 1985 that Foucault s views about sexual repression are preferable to those of Reich Herbert Marcuse and their followers in that they have provide more accurate descriptions and that Foucault is supported by the latest historiographic research on bourgeois sex Merquior considered the second two volumes of The History of Sexuality to be of higher scholarly quality than the first and found Foucault to be original and insightful in his discussion of the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius and other Stoics in The Care of the Self However he found the details of Foucault s views open to question and suggested that Foucault s discussion of Greek pederasty is less illuminating than that of Kenneth Dover despite Foucault s references to Dover s Greek Homosexuality 1978 27 The philosopher Roger Scruton rejected Foucault s claim that sexual morality is culturally relative in Sexual Desire 1986 He also criticized Foucault for assuming that there could be societies in which a problematisation of the sexual did not occur Scruton concluded that No history of thought could show the problematisation of sexual experience to be peculiar to certain specific social formations it is characteristic of personal experience generally and therefore of every genuine social order 28 The philosopher Peter Dews argued in Logics of Disintegration that Foucault s rejection of the repressive hypothesis is more apparent than real and that the hypothesis is not abolished but simply displaced in The History of Sexuality as shown for example by Foucault s persistent references to the body and its pleasures and to ars erotica 29 The classicist Page duBois called The Use of Pleasure one of the most exciting new books in classical studies and an important contribution to the history of sexuality but added that Foucault takes for granted and thus authorizes exactly what needs to be explained the philosophical establishment of the autonomous male subject 30 The historian Patricia O Brien wrote that Foucault was without expertise in dealing with antiquity and that The History of Sexuality lacks the methodological rigor of Foucault s earlier works especially Discipline and Punish 31 Evaluations in books 1990 present Edit The philosopher Judith Butler argued in Gender Trouble 1990 that the theory of power Foucault expounds in the first volume of The History of Sexuality is to some extent contradicted by Foucault s subsequent discussion of the journals of Herculine Barbin a 19th century French intersex person whereas in the former work Foucault asserts that sexuality is coextensive with power in Herculine Barbin he fails to recognize the concrete relations of power that both construct and condemn Herculine s sexuality instead romanticizing Barbin s world of pleasure as the happy limbo of a non identity and expressing views akin to those of Marcuse Butler further argued that this conflict is evident within The History of Sexuality noting that Foucault refers there to bucolic and innocent sexual pleasures that exist prior to the imposition of regulative strategies 32 The classicist David M Halperin claimed in One Hundred Years of Homosexuality 1990 that the appearance of the English translation of the first volume of Foucault s work in 1978 together with the publication of Dover s Greek Homosexuality the same year marked the beginning of a new era in the study of the history of sexuality 33 He suggested that The History of Sexuality may be the most important contribution to the history of western morality since Friedrich Nietzsche s On the Genealogy of Morality 1887 34 The critic Camille Paglia rejected Halperin s views calling The History of Sexuality a disaster Paglia wrote that much of The History of Sexuality is fantasy unsupported by the historical record and that it is acknowledged even by Foucault s admirers to be his weakest work 35 The economist Richard Posner described The History of Sexuality as a remarkable fusion of philosophy and intellectual history in Sex and Reason 1992 adding that the book is lucidly written 36 Diana Hamer wrote in the anthology The Sexual Imagination From Acker to Zola 1993 that The History of Sexuality is Foucault s best known work on sexuality 37 The historian Michael Mason wrote that in The History of Sexuality Foucault presents what amounts to an argument against the possibility of making historical connections between beliefs about sex and sexual practices but that the argument is only acceptable if one accepts the need to shift attention from sexuality to sex in thinking about the sexual culture of the last three centuries and that Foucault does not make a case for such a need 38 The critic Alexander Welsh criticized Foucault for failing to place Sigmund Freud in the context of 19th century thought and culture 39 The classicist Walter Burkert called Foucault s work the leading example of the position that sexuality takes different forms in different civilizations and is therefore a cultural construct 40 The historian Roy Porter called The History of Sexuality a brilliant enterprise astonishingly bold shocking even in its subversion of conventional explanatory frameworks chronologies and evaluations and in its proposed alternatives Porter credited Foucault with discrediting the view proposed for example by Marcuse in Eros and Civilization 1955 that industrialization demanded erotic austerity 41 The philosopher Martha Nussbaum wrote that the claim that homosexuality is a cultural construction is associated more with Foucault s The History of Sexuality than with any other work 42 The classicist Bruce Thornton wrote that The Use of Pleasure was usually quite readable surveying the ancient evidence to make some good observations about the various techniques developed to control passion but faulted Foucault for limiting his scope to fourth century medical and philosophical works 43 The philosopher Arnold Davidson wrote that while Foucault s interpretation of the culture of the self in late antiquity is sometimes too narrow and therefore misleading this is a defect of interpretation rather than of conceptualization Davidson argued that Foucault s conceptualization of ethics as the self s relationship to itself provides us with a framework of enormous depth and subtlety and allows us to grasp aspects of ancient thought that would otherwise remain occluded 44 The psychoanalyst Joel Whitebook argued that while Foucault proposes that bodies and pleasures should be the rallying point against the deployment of sexuality bodies and pleasures like other Foucauldian terms is a notion with little content Whitebook who endorsed Dews assessment of Foucault s work found Foucault s views to be comparable to those of Marcuse and suggested that Foucault was indebted to Marcuse 45 In 2005 Scruton dismissed The History of Sexuality as mendacious and called his book Sexual Desire 1986 an answer to Foucault s work 46 Romana Byrne criticized Foucault s argument that the scientia sexualis belongs to modern Western culture while the ars erotica belongs only to Eastern and Ancient societies arguing that a form of ars erotica has been evident in Western society since at least the eighteenth century 47 Scruton wrote in 2015 that contrary to Foucault s claims the ancient texts Foucault examines in The Use of Pleasure are not primarily about sexual pleasure Nevertheless he found the second two volumes of The History of Sexuality more scholarly than Foucault s previous work Scruton concluded of the work in general that it creates an impression of a normalized Foucault His command of the French language his fascination with ancient texts and the by ways of history his flamboyant imagination and beautiful style all have been put at last to a proper use in order to describe the human condition respectfully and to cease to look for the secret structures beneath its smile 48 See also EditFoucauldian discourse analysis Greek love PostsexualismReferences Edit Confessions of the Flesh by Michel Foucault Penguin Random House Retrieved 27 February 2021 The idea that sexuality including homosexuality is a social construction is associated more with The History of Sexuality than with any other work citation needed Foucault 1976 pp 1 14 Foucault 1976 p 49 Foucault 1976 pp 15 36 Foucault 1976 pp 37 49 Foucault 1976 pp 53 73 Foucault 1976 p 77 91 Foucault 1976 pp 92 102 131 a b Foucault 1976 p 139 Foucault 1984 p 12 Foucault Michel 1988 1990 The history of sexuality Robert Hurley Vintage books ed New York p 245 ISBN 0 679 72469 9 OCLC 5102034 Foucault Michel 1988 1990 The history of sexuality Robert Hurley Vintage books ed New York p 5 ISBN 0 679 72469 9 OCLC 5102034 Foucault 1984 pp 3 240 Bernasconi 2005 p 310 Davidson 2003 p 125 Flood Alison 12 February 2018 Key fourth book of Foucault s History of Sexuality published in France The Guardian Retrieved 5 February 2019 Libbey Peter 8 February 2018 Michel Foucault s Unfinished Book Published in France The New York Times Retrieved 5 February 2019 Foucault 1999 pp 34 47 Les aveux de la chair Bibliotheque des Histoires GALLIMARD Site Gallimard www gallimard fr Murray 1995 pp 623 624 Soble 2009 p 118 Caplan 1981 p 165 Altman 1982 p 48 Greer 1985 p 198 Gay 1985 pp 468 9 Merquior 1991 pp 121 2 132 135 6 Scruton 1994 pp 34 362 Dews 2007 p 205 duBois 1988 p 2 O Brien 1989 p 42 Butler 2007 pp 127 8 131 Halperin 1990 p 4 Halperin 1990 p 62 Paglia 1993 p 187 Posner 1992 p 23 Hamer 1993 p 92 Mason 1995 pp 172 3 Welsh 1994 p 128 Burkert 1996 pp 17 191 Porter 1996 pp 248 252 Nussbaum 1997 pp 27 39 Thornton 1997 p 246 Davidson 2003 p 130 Whitebook 2003 pp 335 337 8 Scruton 2005 p 55 Byrne 2013 pp 1 4 Scruton 2015 pp 112 3 Bibliography Edit BooksAltman Dennis 1982 The Homosexualization of America Boston Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 4143 7 Bernasconi Robert 2005 Honderich Ted ed The Oxford Companion to Philosophy Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 926479 7 Burkert Walter 1996 Creation of the Sacred Tracks of Biology in Early Religions Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 17569 3 Butler Judith 2007 Gender Trouble Feminism and the Subversion of Identity New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 38955 6 Byrne Romana 2013 Aesthetic Sexuality A Literary History of Sadomasochism New York Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 4411 0081 8 Caplan Jane 1981 The Cambridge Women s Studies Group ed Women in Society Interdisciplinary Essays London Virago ISBN 978 0 86068 083 3 Davidson Arnold 2003 Gutting Gary ed The Cambridge Companion to Foucault Second Edition Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 60053 8 Dews Peter 2007 Logics of Disintegration Post Structuralist Thought and the Claims of Critical Theory London Verso ISBN 978 1 84467 574 6 duBois Page 1988 Sowing the Body Psychoanalysis and Ancient Representations of Women Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 16757 2 Foucault Michel 1979 1976 The History of Sexuality Volume 1 An Introduction London Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 7139 1094 0 Foucault Michel 1992 1984 The History of Sexuality Volume 2 The Use of Pleasure London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 013734 7 Foucault Michel 1990 1984 The History of Sexuality Volume 3 The Care of the Self London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 013735 4 Foucault Michel 2021 2021 The History of Sexuality Volume 4 Confessions of the Flesh London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 24 138958 4 Foucault Michel 1999 Religion and culture Michel Foucault Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 92362 0 Gay Peter 1985 The Bourgeois Experience Victoria to Freud Volume I Education of the Senses Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 503728 9 Greer Germaine 1985 Sex and Destiny The Politics of Human Fertility London Picador ISBN 978 0 330 28551 3 Halperin David M 1990 One Hundred Years of Homosexuality And Other Essays on Greek Love New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 90097 3 Hamer Diana 1993 Gilbert Harriett ed The Sexual Imagination From Acker to Zola A Feminist Companion London Jonathan Cape ISBN 0 224 03535 5 Macey David 1993 The Lives of Michel Foucault London Hutchinson ISBN 978 0091753443 Mason Michael 1995 The Making of Victorian Sexuality Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 285312 7 McGee R Jon Warms Richard L 2011 Anthropological Theory An Introductory History New York McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0078034886 Merquior J G 1991 Foucault London FontanaPress ISBN 978 0 00 686226 0 Miller James 1993 The Passion of Michel Foucault New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0671695507 Mills Sara 2004 Michel Foucault London Routledge ISBN 978 0415245692 Nussbaum Martha 1997 Estlund David M Nussbaum Martha C eds Sex Preference and Family Essays on Law and Nature Oxford Oxford University Press Bibcode 1998spf book E ISBN 978 0 19 509894 5 O Brien Patricia 1989 Hunt Lynn ed The New Cultural History London University of California ISBN 978 0 520 06429 4 Paglia Camille 1993 Sex Art and American Culture Essays New York Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 017209 6 Posner Richard 1992 Sex and Reason Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 80279 7 Porter Roy 1996 Keddie Nikki R ed Debating Gender Debating Sexuality New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 4655 4 Scruton Roger 2015 Fools Frauds and Firebrands London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 4081 8733 3 Scruton Roger 2005 Gentle Regrets Thoughts from a Life New York Continuum ISBN 978 0 8264 8033 0 Scruton Roger 1994 Sexual Desire A Philosophical Investigation London Phoenix ISBN 978 1 85799 100 0 Smart Barry 2002 Michel Foucault London Routledge ISBN 978 0415285339 Thornton Bruce S 1997 Eros The Myth of Ancient Greek Sexuality Boulder Colorado Westview Press ISBN 978 0 8133 3226 0 Welsh Alexander 1994 Freud s Wishful Dream Book Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 03718 9 Whitebook Joel 2003 Gutting Gary ed The Cambridge Companion to Foucault Second Edition Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 60053 8 JournalsFoucault Michel 1982 The Subject and Power Critical Inquiry 8 4 777 795 doi 10 1086 448181 S2CID 55355645 Murray Stephen O 1995 Southwest Asian and North African Terms for Homosexual Roles Archives of Sexual Behavior 24 6 623 629 doi 10 1007 bf01542184 PMID 8572911 S2CID 26194957 Soble Alan 2009 A History of Erotic Philosophy Journal of Sex Research 46 2 3 104 120 doi 10 1080 00224490902747750 PMID 19308838 S2CID 22332883 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete subscription required External links EditSummaries of the book 1 2 Previews of the original French editions La volonte de savoir La volonte de savoir Google Books Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The History of Sexuality amp oldid 1135135461, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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