Neoliberalism and Contemporary American Literature

Shapiro note 33

Compare the first passage from Foucault’s Biopolitics (186) to one by Antonio Gramsci:
  1. “The term itself, power, does no more than designate a domain of relations which…I have proposed to call governmentality, that is to say, the way in which one conducts the conduct of men, is no more than a proposed analytical grid for these relations of power. So, we have been trying out this notion of governmentality and, second, seeing how this grid of governmentality, which we may assume is valid for the analysis of ways of conducting the conduct of mad people, patients, delinquents, and children, may equally be valid when we are dealing with phenomena of a completely different scale, such as an economic policy, for example, or the management of a whole social body, and so on.”
  2. “In practice, this problem is the correspondence ‘spontaneously and freely accepted’ between the acts and the admissions of each individual, between the conduct of each individual and the ends which society sets itself as necessary-­a correspondence which is coercive in the sphere of positive law technically under­stood, and is spontaneous and free (more strictly ethical) in those zones in which ‘coercion’ is not a State affair but is effected by public opinion, moral climate, etc.” Antonio Gramsci, Selections From the Prison Notebooks, trans. Quintin Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell Smith (New York: International Publisher, 1971), 195–6.

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