ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

Foucault and Psychiatric Crisis: Towards a Genealogy of Psychopolitics

Political Theory
Political Violence
Critical Theory
Power
Sergei Prozorov
University of Jyväskylä
Sergei Prozorov
University of Jyväskylä

To access full paper downloads, participants are encouraged to install the official Event App, available on the App Store.


Abstract

The paper contributes to the genealogy of current tendencies in biopolitical governance by reconstructing Michel Foucault’s analysis of the application of the notion of crisis in 19th century psychiatry. This analysis complements and corrects Reinhart Koselleck’s history of the concept that viewed crisis as originally a medical, judicial or theological concept that was transferred to the political domain in the 18th century. In contrast, Foucault highlights how the psychiatric application of the concept of crisis was itself political, conditioned by the disciplinary power of the psychiatrist. Unlike the ancient medical concept of crisis that emphasized the doctor’s judgment in observing the event of truth in the course of the disease, psychiatric crisis is explicitly forced by the doctor in order to elicit the desired symptoms in the patient and convert their power of disciplinary confinement into medical diagnosis. The article argues that this notion of crisis resonates with the tendencies observed in contemporary crisis governance in Western societies. While these tendencies are often addressed in terms of ‘psychopolitics’ that presumably succeeds Foucault’s ‘biopolitics’, we suggest that Foucault’s own work on psychiatric power offers a valuable genealogical perspective on the contemporary governance of crises.