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Book contents
- Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION
- PART ONE HOSPITALS AND ASYLUMS
- PART TWO PRISONS
- 9 Michel Foucault's Impact on the German Historiography of Criminal Justice, Social Discipline, and Medicalization
- 10 The History of Ideas and Its Significance for the Prison System
- 11 The Prerogatives of Confinement in Germany, 1933-1945
- 12 “Comparing Apples and Oranges?” The History of Early Prisons in Germany and the United States, 1800-1860
- 13 Reformers United: The American and the German Juvenile Court, 1882-1923
- 14 The Medicalization of Criminal Law Reform in Imperial Germany
- 15 Prison Reform in France and Other European Countries in the Nineteenth Century
- 16 Surveillance and Redemption: The Casa di Correzione of San Michele a Ripa in Rome
- 17 “Policing the Bachelor Subculture”: The Demographics of Summary Misdemeanants, Allegheny County Jail, 1892-1923
- 18 Beyond Confinement?: Notes on the History and Possible Future of Solitary Confinement in Germany
- Index
9 - Michel Foucault's Impact on the German Historiography of Criminal Justice, Social Discipline, and Medicalization
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2013
- Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION
- PART ONE HOSPITALS AND ASYLUMS
- PART TWO PRISONS
- 9 Michel Foucault's Impact on the German Historiography of Criminal Justice, Social Discipline, and Medicalization
- 10 The History of Ideas and Its Significance for the Prison System
- 11 The Prerogatives of Confinement in Germany, 1933-1945
- 12 “Comparing Apples and Oranges?” The History of Early Prisons in Germany and the United States, 1800-1860
- 13 Reformers United: The American and the German Juvenile Court, 1882-1923
- 14 The Medicalization of Criminal Law Reform in Imperial Germany
- 15 Prison Reform in France and Other European Countries in the Nineteenth Century
- 16 Surveillance and Redemption: The Casa di Correzione of San Michele a Ripa in Rome
- 17 “Policing the Bachelor Subculture”: The Demographics of Summary Misdemeanants, Allegheny County Jail, 1892-1923
- 18 Beyond Confinement?: Notes on the History and Possible Future of Solitary Confinement in Germany
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
When historians first think of Michel Foucault, they think of the history of discipline, of prisons, asylums, and hospitals, and of the medical profession. These topics have become more central now to the historical enterprise than ten or twenty years ago. Yet they are discussed less in the German-speaking world than in the Anglo-American or French. Since Foucault's work contributed greatly to fostering interest in these subjects, it is interesting to examine Foucault's reception by German historians. Beyond specific interest in certain subjects the analysis of this reception might tell us more about the fundamental assumptions of German historiography.
My discussion of the reception of Foucault is broken down into three parts. First, I compare the German with the international reception and describe the historian s role in it. I then analyze the arguments historians put forward in reviews of Foucault's books, focusing on central topics of this work in the history of criminal justice and discipline and less on mental asylums and hospitals in early modern and modern times. Then I present examples of how German historians appropriated Foucault.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Institutions of ConfinementHospitals, Asylums, and Prisons in Western Europe and North America, 1500–1950, pp. 155 - 174Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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