Title: Urge to Seek Nature Encouraged,
1Lecture 14
- Urge to Seek Nature Encouraged,
- Yet,
- Natural Urges Discouraged?
- The Contradictions within Boy Scouting
2Pre-class slide linkFoucaults France when he
was 13 years oldnotice the infrastructure and
the presence of the militaryit is easy to see
how the seeds were planted for his understanding
of power
3Things
- Paper Due next Wednesday, March 5, 2008
- The four letter word is fast approaching
- Exam
- April 22, 2008, 200 pm - 430 pm
- Sobey Building 160
- Review Ill hold Office Hours on certain dates
in April for reviewattendance is optional. Ill
also respond to all emails in April prior to the
exam.
4Today
- Presentations
- Lecture
- Foucault - RECAP
- Readings
- Pryke, S. (2005). The control of sexuality in the
early British Boy Scouts movement. Sex Education,
5 (1), 15-28. - A and S on Foucault
5Presentations
- And, please pick up artifacts after class if your
name begins with M.
6Recap and More on Michel Foucault
7Foucaults Place in Sociological Thought
- 1926-1984
- Remember he was a young teenager during the
World War II, which impacted him greatly. How
would you be impacted if a major war was going on
in Canada? - Our concern with Foucault the disciplined,
sexualized, over-powered, taboo-ed body coerced
by the legitimized truths of institutions - - -
the controlled body/mind the controlled
society. - (www.nndb.com/people/323/000095038/foucault.jpg)
8- His MAIN CONCERN in every area of his research
- how certain legitimate knowledges were so
powerful that they could shape societies and
control individuals
- Legitimate knowledge is believed to come from
official institutions, such as government
offices what are other examples of where
legitimate knowledges come from?
9So instead of referring to 'power' and
'knowledge' separately, he prefers to compound
the term 'power/knowledge'. Foucault defines the
principle methodology of the genealogist as that
of history. In fact, he calls the genealogist
'the new historian'.
- This represents a humanization of the treatment
of criminals it had grown more kind, less
painful, and less cruel punishment had grown
more rationalized and in many ways impinged
more on the prisonersthe link between knowledge
and power AS p. 372 - Foucault is interested in the way that knowledge
gives birth to technologies that exert power. In
this context, he deals with the Panopticon). Hear
of this?
- In his book, Discipline and Punish (about how
prisoners torture was replaced by control over
them by prison rules) he explored the idea of a
genealogy of truth.
10Panopticon
- The brainchild of Jeremy Bentham, though the
concept has been around forever - Technology has revolutionized
- the features of the panopticon.What are some
modernexamples of panopticons? - The panopticon is a goodexample of the
materialaspect of the ecological dialogue of
control. - Keep this in mind when looking at the panoptic
control over Boy Scouts. - www.danlockton.co.uk/.../images/panopticon.jpg
11- We shall soon consider how close Foucaults
prison analogy is to the control of (presumed)
normal sexuality in the Boy Scout movement.I
know, it seems like a long leap. Foucault
control is control is control.
12- Genealogy of Power
- (Foucault) History is a genealogy of power ---
the sane having control over the oppressed
13Think of a family tree. What is an example of a
genealogy of the Scouting movement?
- Use the ecological dialogue to get you started
- Ideal Material Practical
14FoucaultTruth there is no one truth what
people consider to be truth is the outcome of
dominant knowledge/power
- Power in any social era, power and knowledge are
interdependent through a special relationship
power cannot be possessed by someone, but it can
be exercised by institutions (where the
institutionalization of norms is exercised) - You are students now, and students are extremely
controlled. In your dream job, how much control
do you want over your life as compared to being a
student? - Is your sexuality being controlled here at SMU?
- Episteme each era is characterized by its own
body of knowledge of how to control people
(bodies), such as how new kinds of scientific
knowledge about the human body had given rise to
new ways of controlling bodies. The human body
was entering a machinery of power that explores
it, breaks it down and rearranges it. Thus
discipline produces subjected and practiced
bodies (p. 239). Do you think that bodies DO
require or benefit from being controlled in some
situations?
15Refer to Handouts
- Foucault Bingo Instructions As I read
selected passages from the article on Boy Scout
sexuality, fill in points/examples from the
reading under the most appropriate heading (SEE
NEXT SLIDE). - Objective Using Foucaults method, to show how
truth can be constructed through legitimized
(things made official by social institutions)
ideologies to keep the past in the present via
CONTROL
16Bingo Headings (photo http//www.pinetreeweb.co
m/B-P.htm)
- With Foucaults concepts in mind, fill in your
card under the following headings. - 1. IDEAL (emotions, spirituality, thoughts,
ideas, norms) - 2. MATERIAL (things you can sense see, hear,
touch, smell) - 3. PRACTICAL (actions things people do or say
actions that impacts other people, places, or
things, such as activism or surgery) - 4. NATURE REFERENCES
- 5. GENDER
- There is overlap. Corporeal means body/bodily.
- Chivalry means manliness/manhood.
17Scouting Badgework
18Some materials of Scouting
- Consider
- The nude body
- Male-to-male camaraderie
- P. 37
- Connecting boys to/in naturea series of books
called BOY SCOUTS IN THE WILDERNESS
19- Girl Guides of Canada
- (engineer, heritage homeskills, nature observer,
scientist, recycler) (http//www.girlguides.ca/cli
part.asp?id242clipcat22)
20A gender difference?
- Consider
- Apples (raw material in nature, out there)
- Cookies (produced in private sphere)
- How well would Boy Scout Cookies go over?
- Could Girl Guides find success and acceptance in
selling apples? What other institution in many
nations anchors gender to apples?
21Sexuality in the Organization
- Tolerance (a dirty word?)
- Remember, the uniform is an example of the
material aspect of the ecological dialogue of
scouting. - When homosexuals wear the uniform, legally, how
can others tell they are homosexual?
22Pryke, S. (2005). The control of sexuality in the
early British Boy Scouts movement. Sex Education,
5 (1), 15-28.
- Pryke notes a paradox there was much ado about
sex in a sexless organization. - It was a place for boys to escape the lure of the
female, where they could have fun in nature and
learn how to become men. Baden-Powell, the one
who developed the movement, was a general in the
Boer War a war hero. Who better to start a
boys organization, Right? - In the next couple of clips, examine the uniform
and other material things --- can you tell if
someone is homosexual in these clips? - Hmmmm (In whose interest is this truth?)
- Who was Robert Baden-Powell? (In whose
interest?) - This links home website is Famous British
Paedophiles --- again, the counterculture is
never far awaydo you think this is a fair
judgment of Baden-Powell?
23Influence of The Social Purity Movement
- Late 1800s to around 1930 in Great Britain and
other parts of Europe - A response to many things, including a physical
reading of the Christian Bible - Mostly otherwise good churchwomen (Church of
England/Anglican) aimed at regulating and
purifying the morality of the social, by - Ending prostitution
- Ending divorce
- Ending illegitimate children births
- Ending dirty literatures
- MASTURBATION WAS a SINFUL urge LED TO INSANITY
WAS DIRTY
24Pryke suggests that
- Scouting, among other things, functioned to
control adolescent sexuality through repressing
masturbation viewed as unnatural, though
everyone was doing it. - This was carried out through ideals about what
was natural and what was unnatural --- this was
communicated through text, brotherhood and
manhood, war, religion, nationhood, and sanity.
25- 1. Mid-term PAPER DUE NEXT WEDNESDAY LET ME KNOW
IF YOU NEED ASSISTANCE! Im away for the next few
daysemails will begin to be answered by late
Saturday. - 2. Reading for Next Class CP Ridley, M. (1993).
The red queen Sex and the evolution of human
nature (pp. 92-105). New York, NY Perennial. -
- 3. Next Week Ill review Februarys classes
- 4. March Classes We begin to focus more on the
Practical aspects of the ecological dialogue as
applied to Gender, Sex, Sexuality, and Nature.
Remember Ideal, Material, and Practical aspects
cannot be separated from each other, though most
variables/things fit BEST into one of those to
help unpack its genealogy of truth, to use
Foucaults term.