Notes on Bio-History: Michel Foucault and the Political Economy of Health Cover Image

Notes on Bio-History: Michel Foucault and the Political Economy of Health
Notes on Bio-History: Michel Foucault and the Political Economy of Health

Author(s): Xenia Chiaramonte
Subject(s): Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego
Keywords: bio-history; social medicine; Michel Foucault; public health; institutions; COVID-19 pandemics

Summary/Abstract: In October 1974, Foucault gave three lectures in Rio de Janeiro on the archeology of the cure. This piece will comment on the first two, published a few years later in France with the original titles: Crise de la médicine ou crise de l’antimédicine? and La naissance de la médicine sociale. Bio-history is the term Michel Foucault initially uses – in the second lecture – to refer to the effect of the strong medical intervention at the biological level that started in the eighteenth century and has left a trace that is still visible in our society. It is on this occasion that Foucault introduces the concept, or rather the prefix “bio-” in his analysis, and it is here – as my reflections intend to demonstrate – that we may trace the original meaning of a term that today seems rather abused and find a valuable analytical framework for a cogent approach to the relationship between medicine and power dynamics.

  • Issue Year: 2021
  • Issue No: 96
  • Page Range: 111-123
  • Page Count: 13
  • Language: English