Rights Contact Login For More Details
More About This Title Discourses of Powerfrom Hobbes to Foucault
- English
English
- English
English
- English
English
1. Introduction.
2. That Mortal God: Hobbes on Power and the Sovereign.
3. A Right of Making Laws: Locke on Political Power and Morality.
4. The Supreme Exercise of Power: Lukes and Critical Theory.
5. Discipline and Cherish: Foucault on Power, Government and Domination.
6. Conclusion.
Notes.
References.
Index.
- English
English
"Barry Hindess has crafted an elegant and incisive guide to the debates about power set in motion by Michel Foucault. He offers both a clear account of what is at stake in these debates and a sharp critical sense of how they could develop." Professor R. B. J. Walker, Department of Political Science, University of Victoria
"With this book, Barry Hindess sets new parameters for any future discourses on power. He unravels the confusion of power as capacity and power as right which has dogged modern political theory from Hobbes and Locke onwards, and sets out clearly the presuppositions of contemporary theories of power. On this basis, he is able to locate Foucault squarely in the mainstream of modern political thought, and to demonstrate the radicality of his attempts to refocus the analysis of power onto the nature and forms of government. In a brief concluding chapter, Hindess sums up both the strengths and limits of Foucault's challenge to political theory, and points to the fictions of political community as constraints upon political thought which remain to be critically examined. A model of clear and effective writing, this book should be read by all students of political and social thought." Paul Patton, Senior Lecturer in Philisophy, The University of Sydney
"This book is a provocative and important contribution to the debate on power, written in a lucid and succinct style." Paul Rutherford, The University of Sydney
"Hindess is relaxed and labyrinthine, supplying an engaging introduction to the debate [of the concepts of power], which students especially will enjoy." Preston King, University of Lancaster