The Foucauldian Peacekeeper: On the Dispersion of Power and the Futility of Change

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Abstract

Foucault is widely known for the radical nature of his work, for his idiosyncratic approach to history, and for his reconfiguration of the concept of power. Curiously though, his conceptions of history and power might act to undermine their potential to incite radical critique of systems of education and wider society, resulting in a more patient, restrained and ultimately conservative scholarship than you would at first expect. The apparent points of similarity between Michel Foucault, Herbert George Wells and the reformist, statistician and eugenicist, Karl Pearson, will be outlined in order to exemplify this apparent danger. Whilst Foucault would be at odds with Pearson's authoritarian view of education, the Foucauldian account of power seems, oddly, to lead to agreement with Pearson on the futility of revolutionary change.

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Allen, A. (2009). The Foucauldian Peacekeeper: On the Dispersion of Power and the Futility of Change. Power and Education, 1(2), 226–237. https://doi.org/10.2304/power.2009.1.2.226

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