Hear Michel Foucault’s Lecture “The Culture of the Self,” Presented in English at UC Berkeley (1983)
Michel Foucault’s time in the United States in the last years of his
life, particularly his time as a lecturer at UC Berkeley, proved to be
extraordinarily productive in the development of his theoretical
understanding of what he saw as the central question facing the
contemporary West: the question of the self. In his 1983 Berkeley
lectures in English on “The Culture of the Self,” Foucault stated and
restated the question in a variety of ways—“What are we in our
actuality?,” “What are we today?”—and his investigations amount to “an
alternative to the traditional philosophical questions: What is the
world? What is man? What is truth? What is knowledge? How can we know
something? And so on.” So write the editors of the posthumously
published 1988 essay collection Technologies of the Self, titled after a lecture Foucault delivered at the University of Vermont in 1982.
In that talk,
Foucault notes that “the hermeneutics of the self has been confused
with theologies of the soul—concupiscence, sin, and the fall from
grace.” The technique of confession, central even to secular
psychoanalysis, informs a subjectivity that, for Foucault, always
develops under the ever-watchful eyes of normalizing institutions. But
in “The Culture of the Self,” Foucault reaches back to ancient Greek
conceptions of “care of the self” (epimelieia beautou) to
locate a subjectivity derived from a different tradition—a counterpoint
to religious confessional and Freudian subjectivities and one he has
discussed in terms of the technique of “self writing.” (The Care of the Self also happens to be the subtitle of the third volume of Foucault’s History of Sexuality, and “The Culture of the Self” the title of its second chapter.)
The notion that one is granted selfhood through the ministrations of
others comes in for ridicule in the first few minutes of his “Culture of
the Self” lecture above. Foucault relates a story by second century
Greek satirist Lucian to illustrate a humorous point about “those guys
who nowadays regularly visit a kind of master who takes their money from
them in order to teach them how to take care of themselves.” He
identifies the ancient version of this dubious authority as the
philosopher, but it seems that he intends in modern times to refer more
broadly to psychiatrists, psychologists, and all manner of religious
figures and self-help gurus.
Foucault sets up the joke to introduce his first entrée into the
pursuit of “the historical ontology of ourselves,” a consideration of
Kant’s essay “What is Enlightenment?”
In that work, the most prominent German Enlightenment philosopher
describes “man’s emergence from his self-imposed nonage,” a term he
defines as “the inability to use one’s own understanding without
another’s guidance.” From there, Foucault opens up his investigation to
an analysis of “three sets of relations: our relations to truth, our
relations to obligation, our relations to ourselves and to the others.”
You’ll have to listen to the full set of lectures, above in all five
parts, to follow Foucault’s inquiry through its many passages and
divergences and learn how he arrives at this conclusion: “The self is
not so much something hidden and therefore something to be excavated but
as a correlate of the technologies of self that it co-evolves with over
millennium.”
The Q&A session, above, was held on a different day and is also
well worth a listen. Foucault addresses several queries about his own
methodology, issues of disciplinary boundaries, and other clarifying (or
not) concerns related to his main lecture. See this site for a transcript of the questions from the audiences and Foucault’s insightful, and sometimes quite funny, answers.
Related Content:
Hear Michel Foucault Deliver His Lecture on “Truth and Subjectivity” at UC Berkeley, In English (1980)
Michel Foucault and Alain Badiou Discuss “Philosophy and Psychology” on French TV (1965)
Watch a “Lost Interview” With Michel Foucault: Missing for 30 Years But Now Recovered
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness
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