Michel Foucault: : biopolítica y biopoética

In Michel Foucault’s works, the complex inteface among life, politics and history poses a key problem that the author approached from different perspectives. In the ’70, biopolitics was one of the many strategies to analyse that link, though doubtless a fundamental one, since it meant both a shift f...

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Autor principal: Dávilo, Beatriz
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Universidad Nacional de Rosario. Facultad de Humanidades y Artes. Escuela de Letras 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://sagarevistadeletras.unr.edu.ar/index.php/revista/article/view/79
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Sumario:In Michel Foucault’s works, the complex inteface among life, politics and history poses a key problem that the author approached from different perspectives. In the ’70, biopolitics was one of the many strategies to analyse that link, though doubtless a fundamental one, since it meant both a shift from the point of view underlying the writings of the previous decade and a delimitation of a threshold on which Foucault would lately define the notion of ‘government’ related to the concept of ‘governmentality’. The continual gliding between the analysis of the biological life or zoe and the sense-invested life or bios –regardless the accuracy in the use of this words- evinces the modulations of a concern encompassing biopower controls such as anatomopolitics of the bodies and biopolitics of populations, and biopoetics understood as the shared work of building a qualified life or a life-style.