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Habermas's Musse, Foucault's Genealogy. What's wrong (CRITIQUE) Jurgen Habermas ' ... FOUCAULT'S GENEALOGY. And these genealogies, that are the combined ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Habermas's Musse, Foucault's Genealogy


1
Habermas's Musse, Foucault's Genealogy
2
Whats wrong (CRITIQUE)Jurgen Habermas
  • "the collapse of the discussional."
  • "no longer cultivation Bildung but rather
    consumption opens access to culture goods."

3
Whats wrong (CRITIQUE)
  • private alienation in a narcissistic society

4
Whats wrong (CRITIQUE)
  • as impossible a project as Sartre's "thing for
    and in itself."

5
Whats wrong (CRITIQUE)
  • "the commodification of culture" or "the
    colonization of non-economic aspirations,
  • For us, our concerns with place as human abode,
    constructed by communities of discourse,
    shaired stories, meanings, histories being
    replaced by spaces empty of meaning,
    uninhabitable by humans, diminishing humanity,
    blocking culture production

6
Whats wrong (CRITIQUE)
  • Gorz argues that there are two fundamental errors
    in the new economic incarnations of positivism
  • the belief that all human values may be
    represented in the market place, and the
    imperative to expand the "economic sphere"
    indefinitely into previously free human
    activities. (One of Gorz's central metaphors is
    prostitution, standing for the commercializing
    and thus destruction of free human associations)

7
Whats wrong (CRITIQUE)
  • Gorz observes that unrestrained capitalism is
    always imperialistic.
  • Commodification of the Lifeworld (Habermas term)

8
Whats wrong (CRITIQUE)Gorz and Habermas
  • A phantom "public" has replaced the public of
    active cultural performance, exchange, and
    production. The individual is alone in such a
    "public," a face in the crowd with no control
    over the words and symbols that flow around him,
    without power to contribute to the discourse or
    even to repeat the words for herself. The
    isolated, powerless individual and the false
    public are a modern parasitic pair, each feeding
    on the other's inauthentic claims. TALK ELBOW

9
WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US
  • "literary strata,"

10
WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US
  • Rather than facilitate the doing and
    transformation of culture, conceived in
    heterogeneous communities of discourse,
    specialists now reserve literate activities such
    as history for themselves, organizing in
    homogeneous professions, and exercising tight
    bureaucratic controls over what constitutes
    legitimacy, who may use the words, who has access
    to positions, publications, etc.

11
Habermas
  • "continuing alienation between the "productive
    and critical minorities of specialists cultural
    professionals/professors... who keep up with the
    high grade abstraction in art, literature, and
    philosophy, with the way of becoming dated that
    is specific to the ambit of modernity, and of
    course, with mere changes in scene and trendy
    humbug-- and, on the other hand, the great
    public...

12
WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US
  • Rather than facilitate the doing and
    transformation of culture, conceived in
    heterogeneous communities of discourse,
    specialists now reserve literate activities such
    as history for themselves, organizing in
    homogeneous professions, and exercising tight
    bureaucratic controls over what constitutes
    legitimacy, who may use the words, who has access
    to positions, publications, etc.

13
WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US
  • Social science's products are now almost
    exclusively manufactured in-house and reserved
    for elite cultural functionaries for their own
    uses i.e. the power, position, and prestige
    granted the creators and keepers of society's
    knowledge and truth.

14
WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US Foucault
offers a similar indictment
  • "the tyranny of globalizing discourses with their
    hierarchy and all their privileges of a
    theoretical avant guard."

15
WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US the effects
of the centralizing powers
  • exclusivity, power, and pretension

16
WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US Habermas
asks us as professionals and professors
  • "Which speaking, discoursing subjects-- which
    subjects of experience and knowledge-- do you
    want to diminish... Which theoretical-political
    avant-guard do you want to enthrone in order to
    isolate it from all the discontinuous forms of
    knowledge that circulate about it?"

17
WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US Effects
  • "scientific hierarchization of knowledges"
  • "coercion of a theoretical, unitary, formal and
    scientific discourse."
  • KNOWLEDGE HAS A POLITICAL AGENDA

18
WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US
  • Attempting to protect their truth-power and keep
    as many as possible off their turf, academic
    specialists have emerged as captains of culture,
    cultural-capitalists who control the means of
    serious cultural production outside mass culture
    as certainly as any group of robber-barons ever
    cornered the market for industrial products in
    the ninteenth century.

19
DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Seperating from hoi poli, we have reached a dead
    end
  • The literati have produced a powerful critique of
    the core premises of the Enlightenment

20
DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • the 'four illusions of Enlightenment'. These are
  • the myth of the unitary subject
  • Postmodern discourse theory proposes that no
    identity is ever complete. It is on the contrary
    crisscrossed by divisions, defined in opposition
    to its various others, and penetrated by a
    constitutive lack of wholeness that is its very
    condition of possibility. (Darwin, Freud, Marx,
    Hegel)
  • abstract universality
  • Postmodern discourse theory suggests that we have
    to abandon the discourse of the universal and
    recognise the particularity of all claims to
    knowledge and truth.
  • the essentialist conception of the social
    totality. Next slide
  • The quest for the ultimate foundations of
    rationality No more Encyclopedias!!!! slide
    after next

21
  • The characteristic gesture of the Enlightenment
    is to seek out an essential foundation 'beneath'
    the level of surface appearances which is
    supposed to ground the processes happening in
    every region of society. The concept of society
    as a unitary, and fully intelligible, structural
    totality, which is divided into base and
    superstructure, has been fiercely criticised by
    postmodernism. Postmodern discourse theory
    contends that structural totality is always
    surrounded by an 'excess of meaning' which it is
    unable to master and that, consequently,
    'society' as a unitary and intelligible object
    which grounds its own partial processes is an
    impossibility. Or, as Laclau and Mouffe
    elsewhere express it, society is not a valid
    object of discourse.

22
DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • our traditional claims about the existence of an
    extra- discursive truth-- about a transcendent
    subject, standing outside history and the
    structure of language, as the ultimate foundation
    for rationality is questioned.

23
DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Barthes, Derrida, and Foucault have taken the
    next logical, critical step, showing that just as
    there is no external ground that determines
    structure, there is no external "reality" from
    which to understand structure and the meanings it
    generates-- there is no extra-linguistic,
    privileged place outside language and culture
    from which to tell the truth about systems. As
    Derrida put it "there is nothing beyond text."

24
DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • In particular, for historians, Foucault's
    critique of meta- narrative is cataclysmic.

25
DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Jane Caplan observed
  • There remains, however, a basic anxiety for
    historians in the face of deconstruction namely
    that, in making the text ultimately undecidable,
    it abolishes the grounds for privileging any one
    interpretation, and therefore makes the writing
    of conventional history impossible.(my emphasis).

26
deconstruction's centrifugal imperative
  • Caplan insists that "while deconstructive
    methods may be borrowed by the historian for the
    interpretation of texts, deconstruction as an
    epistemology is virtually incompatible with the
    historian's enterprise."
  • Mouffe's project of a radical democracy also
    springs to mind here, as does Beard's metaphor,
    "every man his own historian" retooled to fit the
    times.

27
the box deconstruction has built around the
disciplines
  • most common proposal is pragmatic- Jane Caplan
    is typical in her observation "The utilitarian
    goal here is, for academia, the production of new
    knowledge."
  • "the work of the disciplines" is the sovereign
    consideration.

28
DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX the absurd production of
self-defeating work
  • The reasoning goes, "the work of the disciplines"
    is the sovereign consideration.
  • even though that work has lead to undeniable
    conclusions that undermine the academic project,
    (to "negative self-reference") these must be set
    aside in deference to 'the work to be done.'"

29
  • To me, this all seems like another case of "work
    without end," made even more desperate as such
    work begins to constantly defeat itself.
  • For me, I cannot do history as a professional
    historian.

30
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • HABERMAS'S MUSSE
  • But there are possibilities for professions
    beyond the absurd production of self-defeating
    work possibilities such as the opening out of
    the active creation/practice of culture in
    deconstruction's project of decentering and
    multiplicity.

31
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • It is here that I will begin to speak as a
    professor of leisure and recreation, admitting
    that I am only a historian by craft, not
    profession. I was trained in my craft by some of
    the best historians around, but found my academic
    profession in much despised regions of field
    houses and disreputable academic sub-divisions.
    But I claim this rag-tag profession proudly, and
    with Foucault take a perverse joy in writing
    history as a non-historian saying things about
    alternative practices of history that are perhaps
    not possible for one committed to history
    practiced as a modern profession.

32
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Habermas specifically links the collapse of the
    discussional and the rise of consumer culture
    with changes in leisure time.

33
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Free time, in traditional cultures and according
    to the classical ideal, was the space for the
    active creation of culture.

34
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • For a while, in coffee houses, community centers,
    fraternal societies, etc. workers in modern times
    formed an authentic public and created their own
    words and meaning in leisure.

35
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • This kind of leisure as Musse was displaced by
    industrialization and bourgeois society that
    emptied leisure of it cultural function and
    replaced it with Freiheit vacuous, solipsistic
    freedom, meaningful only in its relation to work
    and the passive consumption of mass
    products/services. (Habermas terms this the
    "depoliticization of leisure").

36
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • This degradation of leisure, from the "basis of
    culture" to the mere service of work and
    consumption, as much as the degeneration
    (deskilling and romanticizing) of work, resulted
    in various forms of alienation among workers who
    no longer have access to public participation and
    culture making.

37
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Habermas argues that only through the recovery of
    "emancipated leisure," freed from the domination
    of work and the bourgeois culture of consumption,
    will workers be freed to reassert their claims to
    culture making.

38
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Such "emancipated leisure" would challenge the
    hegemony of economic values and meanings and the
    culture of work now dominated by the professions
    and other bourgeois structures.

39
  • Marcuse's Eros and Civilization
  • "Automation threatens to render possible the
    reversal of
  • the relation between free time and working
    time the
  • possibility of working time becoming
    marginal and free
  • time becoming full time. The result would
    be a radical
  • transvaluation of values, and a mode of
    existence
  • incompatible with the traditional culture.
    Advanced
  • industrial society is in permanent
    mobilization against
  • this possibility.

40
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Leisure as Musse would also open up the
    possibilities for individuals to generate their
    own meaning and find group prestige in
    association with their fellows in free public
    places and in autonomous cultural activities.
  • In this class we have seen historical examples-
    Little Theatre, Continuing Education

41
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Freed from the control by those outside the
    community that profess some external cultural
    truth or value in language essentially foreign to
    the community, individuals might begin to
    "reconstitute the public sphere."
  • Begin to reconstruct PLACE

42
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Hemingway
  • fundamentally restructuring the
    production-consumption complex and challenging
    the economic definition of human beings.

43
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • FOUCAULT'S GENEALOGY
  • Foucault speaks of his project in remarkably
    similar terms. (Similar to Habermas)

44
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • FOUCAULT'S GENEALOGY
  • it is through the re-appearance of this
    knowledge, of these local popular knowledges..
    that criticism performs its work.... What emerges
    out of this is something one might call a
    genealogy, or rather a multiplicity of
    genealogical researches...

45
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • FOUCAULT'S GENEALOGY
  • And these genealogies, that are the combined
    product of an erudite knowledge and a popular
    knowledge, were nor possible.. except on one
    condition.. that the tyranny of globalising
    discourses with their hierarchy and all their
    privileges of a theoretical avant guard was
    eliminated.

46
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • FOUCAULT'S GENEALOGY
  • Let us give the term genealogy to the union of
    erudite knowledge and local memories which allows
    us to establish a historical knowledge of
    struggles and to make use of this knowledge
    today.

47
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • FOUCAULT'S GENEALOGY
  • Genealogy is based on a reactivation of local
    knowledges... in opposition to scientific
    hierarchisation of knowledges and the effects
    intrinsic to their power

48
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • the authentic work of the professional historian
    is first, critical self-awareness and secondly,
    bringing into "play... local dicursivities"
    through the "activation of local knowledges."

49
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Since it is not possible to turn back the clock
    and recover the "Subjugated Knowledges" in their
    pure states, as if the truth-professions never
    existed, the only option is service- the turning
    of the discipline, methods, skills, and energy of
    the professions to genealogy.

50
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • As professor of leisure and recreation, I am
    primarily interested in Foucault's tactic of
    bringing into "play... local dicursivities" and
    in Habermas' "emancipated leisure"--

51
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • My "professional" or professorial duty is first
    promoting public recreation only secondarily, as
    a means to that end, do I ply my craft as an
    historian and seek reputation for my histories.

52
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Sharing Foucault's purpose, I am most interested
    in the "decentering" of history -- in simple
    terms, the restoration of memory and tradition,
    story and custom, festival and pageant as public
    activities with an "every-day" practice in the
    cities, towns, and communities of this countries.

53
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Place studies- also returning the structuring of
    Place to localities through restoration of memory
    and tradition, story and custom, festival and
    pageant

54
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • years ago in Durham, N.C.
  • Over the years- my work with local parks
    districts, Community and Recreation Centers
    throughout Iowa, Red Cross, YMCAs, Boy Scouts,
    church groups, etc, Iowa Continuing Education

55
A WAY OUT OF DECONSTRUCTIONS BOX
  • Teaching, as I have discovered to my joy, is also
    an effective tool- a way to challenge students to
    "own" the liberal arts, and actually to practice
    what they are learning at college in their lives.
    Perhaps it is a sign of our current concentration
    on research and "the production of new knowledge"
    in the university that my students are constantly
    amazed by my insistence that they find a
    practical place in their lives for reading and
    writing-- for actually doing history, nature,
    music, philosophy, etc. But I am convinced that
    unless our students learn to do the liberal arts
    for their own sakes, free from me and the
    university, as ordinary "non-professionals,"
    their education is a failure.

56
A WARNING
  • I suggest that professional historians and other
    social scientists, without such a recreational or
    teaching goal and without critical self-awareness
    toward the decentering and opening up of the
    practice of the liberal arts and sciences, are
    doomed to continued and increasing cultural
    isolation. We are doomed also to the despairing
    production of works we no longer believe are
    possible in principle, and the gluttonous
    consumption and retention of those wonderful,
    autotelic activities, such as doing history,
    which we have perverted into over-serious labors.

57
CONCLUSION
  • All this producing and consuming in the very
    midst of local communities still starved for
    something beyond getting and spending... Surely,
    it is for us in the literate professions to lead
    the way to the local recovery and everyday
    practice of the free, cultural activities of
    mind, spirit, and body that are more necessary
    for life than any of the myriad new consumer
    products, more even the provision of steady work
    for professional scholars.
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