Methodological reflections on Foucauldian analyses:Adopting the pointers of curiosity, nominalism, conceptual grounding and exemplarity

This article seeks to provide a set of pointers for methodological reflections on Foucauldian-inspired analyses of the exercise of power. Michel Foucault deliberately eschewed methodological schemata, which may be why so little has been written on the methodological implications of his analyses. Whi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:European Journal of Social Theory
Main Authors: Hansen, Magnus Paulsen, Triantafillou, Peter
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://forskning.ruc.dk/da/publications/aa4e6358-5850-418c-bb82-804db897a7e7
https://doi.org/10.1177/13684310221078926
https://hdl.handle.net/1800/aa4e6358-5850-418c-bb82-804db897a7e7
https://rucforsk.ruc.dk/ws/files/80926055/Methodological_reflections_on_Foucauldian_analyses_February_1_2022.pdf
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Summary:This article seeks to provide a set of pointers for methodological reflections on Foucauldian-inspired analyses of the exercise of power. Michel Foucault deliberately eschewed methodological schemata, which may be why so little has been written on the methodological implications of his analyses. While this article shares the premise that we should refrain from a standardized methodology, it argues that providing broad pointers for analyses informed by the critical ambition and conceptual framework offered by Foucault is both desirable and possible. The article then offers some reflections and general guidelines on how to strengthen the methodological quality of Foucauldian analyses. We argue that the quality of Foucauldian-inspired analysis of modern power may gain from methodological reflections around four pointers: curiosity, nominalism, conceptual grounding and exemplarity.