The History of Sexuality #1

The History of Sexuality, Volume 1: An Introduction

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English, French (translation)

170 pages, Hardcover

First published November 17,1976

About the author

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Paul-Michel Foucault was a French philosopher, historian of ideas, writer, political activist, and literary critic. Foucault's theories primarily address the relationships between power and knowledge, and how they are used as a form of social control through societal institutions. Though often cited as a structuralist and postmodernist, Foucault rejected these labels. His thought has influenced academics, especially those working in communication studies, anthropology, psychology, sociology, criminology, cultural studies, literary theory, feminism, Marxism and critical theory.
Born in Poitiers, France, into an upper-middle-class family, Foucault was educated at the Lycée Henri-IV, at the École Normale Supérieure, where he developed an interest in philosophy and came under the influence of his tutors Jean Hyppolite and Louis Althusser, and at the University of Paris (Sorbonne), where he earned degrees in philosophy and psychology. After several years as a cultural diplomat abroad, he returned to France and published his first major book, The History of Madness (1961). After obtaining work between 1960 and 1966 at the University of Clermont-Ferrand, he produced The Birth of the Clinic (1963) and The Order of Things (1966), publications that displayed his increasing involvement with structuralism, from which he later distanced himself. These first three histories exemplified a historiographical technique Foucault was developing called "archaeology".
From 1966 to 1968, Foucault lectured at the University of Tunis before returning to France, where he became head of the philosophy department at the new experimental university of Paris VIII. Foucault subsequently published The Archaeology of Knowledge (1969). In 1970, Foucault was admitted to the Collège de France, a membership he retained until his death. He also became active in several left-wing groups involved in campaigns against racism and human rights abuses and for penal reform. Foucault later published Discipline and Punish (1975) and The History of Sexuality (1976), in which he developed archaeological and genealogical methods that emphasized the role that power plays in society.
Foucault died in Paris from complications of HIV/AIDS; he became the first public figure in France to die from complications of the disease. His partner Daniel Defert founded the AIDES charity in his memory.

Community Reviews

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April 25,2025
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This review was originally published over at my blog, The Grimoire Reliquary.

The notion of Victorian bourgeois society as sexually repressed weighs heavy on the general understanding modern society has of that by-gone time. Michel Foucault, in his History of Sexuality, seeks to dispell this unimaginative notion. Rather, he envisions the very notion of sexuality as a bourgeois invention, meant to negotiate between “power and knowledge,” between “truth and pleasures” in a way which eludes as simplistic an understanding as that of societal repression based on law.

That understanding, Foucault defines through two tenets: “Power represses sex,” and “law constitutes desire”. A lawful framework alone does not have the strength necessary to hold desire back. “One should not think that desire is repressed,” Foucault writes, “for the simple reason that the law is what constitutes both desire and the lack on which it is predicated.”

The hypothesis Foucault offers early on is this:

The society that emerged in the nineteenth century—bourgeois, capitalist, or industrial society, call it what you will—did not confront sex with a fundamental refusal of recognition. On the contrary, it put into operation an entire machinery for producing true discourses concerning it. Not only did it speak of sex and compel everyone to do so; it also set out to formulate the uniform truth of sex. As if it suspected sex of harboring a fundamental secret. As if it needed this production of truth. As if it was essential that sex be inscribed not only in an economy of pleasure but in an ordered system of knowledge.


What follows is a dogged intellectual pursuit of this hypothesis and an examination of that first tenet I mentioned, the repression of sex by power.

Power and sexuality are interwoven so tightly together, Foucault argues, that they cannot be separated. By examining one, touching upon the other is an inevitability. This, then, isn’t only a book on sexuality–it is a book on power:

At bottom, despite the differences in epochs and objectives, the representation of power has remained under the spell of monarchy. In political thought and analysis, we still have not cut off the head of the king. Hence the importance that the theory of power gives to the problem of right and violence, law and illegality, freedom and will, and especially the state and sovereignty (even if the latter is questioned insofar as it is personified in a collective being and no longer a sovereign individual). To conceive of power on the basis of these problems is to conceive of it in terms of a historical form that is characteristic of our societies: the juridical monarchy.


But not power as it is liable to be understood. No, Foucault carefully defines every term he uses; so, for example, power is not “a group of institutions and mechanisms that ensure the subservience of the citizens of a given state,” nor “a mode of subjugation which…has the form of the rule”. But what is it?

Power must be understood in the first instance as the multiplicity of force relations immanent in the sphere in which they operate and which constitute their own organization; as the process which, through ceaseless struggles and confrontations, transforms, strengthens, or reverses them; as the support which these force relations find in one another, thus forming a chain or a system, or on the contrary, the disjunctions and contradictions which isolate them from one another; and lastly, as the strategies in which they take effect, whose general design or institutional crystallization is embodied in the state apparatus, in the formulation of the law, in the various social hegemonies.


Big thoughts here, folks.

Foucault’s arguments redefine the way sexuality is examined. There’s elegance to his writing that persuades and the logic he uses to reformulate questions of power and sexuality, of the relations that defined (and continue to define) this bourgeois society we live in, and the power relations we are all subject and party to.

It’s but the first piece of a larger puzzle–one I’m excited to piece together over the coming months.
April 25,2025
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جزو کتابهایی است که معتقدم حتما باید خوانده شود.
April 25,2025
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Not about sex. Ok, you’re gonna get a bit of sex towards the end, but it’s not really something to fap to. Unless you have a thing for long sentences and elaborate syntax, in which case you’ve hit the jackpot.

Rather, the book is about power and knowledge and how they relate to and influence the human body. Basically sexuality is the means by which the powers that be know about and control your body. And the powers that be which developed this “scientia sexualis” are not, at least in the modern age, all-powerful “sovereign” powers, but a lattice of power-relations, of statistics and controls, that aim to normalize rather than prohibit sexual practices. In order to achieve this normalization, they employed four techniques to develop this science of sex, whose primary purpose is to know the truth about our bodies and the mecahnisms of sex and by which sex becomes a medical subject of investigation, as oppposed to the “ars erotica” of other cultures, where the primary purpose of sex is pleasure. They are the hysterization of women, the transformation of child sexuality into a pathology, birth-control, and the pathology of perversion. And then sex, which is clearly a quantifyable physical act, is, at the same time and because of its ubiquity, the base on which sexuality rests its analysis and speculations.

So yeah, a distinctly satisfying intellectual endeavour, but definitely not fap material here.
April 25,2025
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Why one more review?

Reading our comrades' review, one is very surprised. First of all, many seem to think this book "outdated", which is quite surprising - towards Foucault's writings, the question probably is if we failed the test of time, rather than if he did...

More interesting, most seem to be deceived by the title, and assume this is a book about "sexuality".

Indeed, the discourse on sexuality (Victorian Era, confession, psychoanalysis, etc.) forms its background. The real subject, however, is power and the subject : this book was written just after Discipline and Punish where his thesis on power were already outlined.

As such, it contains Foucault's famous criticism of the sovereign theory of power. It also deeply contested the conception of power as being exclusively a censorship machine, which says what is right and what is wrong, what is legal and what is illegal. Power is also something which produces stuff - the last chapter on populations and nazism should be enough for readers to understand that this book is concerned with something much larger than "sexuality".
April 25,2025
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Laying the foundations so I can read some other books in dialogue with this one. But a pretty great mic drop:

n  

n    Briefly, my aim is to examine the case of a society which has been loudly castigating itself for its hypocrisy for more than a century, which speaks verbosely of its own silence, takes great pains to relate in detail the things it does not say, denounces the powers it exercises, and promises to liberate itself from the very laws that have made it function.n  

n

So far, the way he wants to rethink what’s “obvious” and examine who gets the power if we do think that way is very much my thing.

April 25,2025
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not foucault's best work. few, if any, references. like, i agree individualism was constructed through self-reflexive knowledge production, a confessional technique deployed through criminological, psychological, juridical and pedagogical infrastructures, whose origins can be traced back to medieval developments in christianity, but aren't academics meant to give us the historical evidence of such developments? there were plenty of references in discipline and punish, as well as security, territory and population — this feels lazy in comparison.

at the same time, foucault's argument remains profound. he shows how the suppression of deviant sexualities operates through the proliferation of identities (as scientific objects of knowledge). through confession, we speak the truth of sex to an expert who will supposedly cure us, spiritually, psychologically or socially. this is obvious in present-day queer and neurodivergent discourses, which operate through ever expanding categories of self-labelling (a more neoliberal variant of what foucault describes) — the incessant need to unveil the essence of one's sex. foucault rightly detects in such discourses a construction of desire arising through lack, the constitution of normality through abnormality. along with this, a pleasure in supplication and intellectualisation — a pleasure in knowing desire, over desiring itself. in other words, we get off in knowing that we get off, or knowing that the other gets off. it's a form of power and pleasure, over the one's own, or the other's, pleasure.

i couldn't help but notice how this logic explains conspiracy theorists. there's a certain suspicion of the other's pleasure that drives the endless knowledge production of conspiracy theorists. those god damn jewish black queer feminists are stealing our money, minds and children — and they're enjoying it! naturally, the only way for the conspiracy theorists to regain their own joy is through the exposure of the other's joy, whether it exists or not. they obtain joy only through negation, the endless examination of the deviant other who joys without morality or self-constant.

this, i feel, is the most important and relevant thing to take from this book. the secret joy of compulsive knowing, of unravelling the secret desire of the world, that arises out of enlightenment instrumentality. the petty pseudoindividualism of the nihilist child, incapable of obtaining their own joy, except through the annihilation of the other's. the 21st century in a nutshell.
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