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Regarding the Scull Controversy

Rather than going away as an issue, the Scull versus the Foucauldians debate seems to be spreading. It seems odd to me that people are willing to get worked up over this issue. Afterall, standard periodizations of Foucault's work place The History of Madness outside his developed periods; viz., the archaeological, the genealogical, and the problematization. That is, within the Foucauldian corpus itself, The History of Madness is an outlier (not unlike his commentary on Kant's anthropology, his book on Roussel, or the disavowed Maladie mentale et personnalité). The question, then, appears not to be about the place of The History of Madness in Foucault's own oeuvre - a concept that should no doubt be question by anyone who takes Foucault's work seriously - but, rather, about what "Foucault," that is to say "Theory," signifies in the context of (primarily) (North) American disciplinary politics. (Although, it is worth pointing out that comparing passages from the "Nietzsche, Genealogy, History" essay with The History of Madness is, at best, strange - it is wrong-headed to criticize a non-genealogical work for not being genealogical!) Scull is engaged in a territorial pissing match with rivals. His concern, it seems to me, is to reject the work of Foucauldians by nit-picking Foucault's major dissertation. (I guess it is easier to take on a dead guy's dissertation than it is to take on work published by Nik Rose twenty years ago.) Predictably, the "Theory" warriors - themselves derivative hacks of the worst sort - are all to happy to jump into Scull's boat in an effort to push their own agenda within the narrow perspective of American English departments.

(Cross-posted from theoria.)

By Craig | April 4, 2007 in Academia, Afflicting the Comfortable, Doltishness, Fashionable Nonesense, Intellects, Narrow and Cold and Resenting, Specious Rhetorical Strategies, Yesterday's News | Permalink

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Comments

Are you really this slow-witted? If you want to criticize what I wrote, criticize what I wrote. Were you as superior to unserious, derivative hacks as you proudly declare, you would've responded to their argument with something more substantial than the howl of the outraged acolyte. ("They don't understand my love for you, Michel, and they never will!")

I wonder how deep your dishonesty cuts, i.e. whether you recognize how petty and narrow-minded you look when you bluster on about Madness and Civilization as an outlier when you know damn well the problems Scull raises plague his corpus. ("Maybe if I don't mention that in this post," you must think, "people will forget the evidentiary problems are systemic.")

Then again, what do I know? I'm just some rube in an English department.

Posted by: SEK | Apr 4, 2007 9:12:00 PM

I have no idea what Scott is on about (plagues, apparently?) but it's great to see you posting again Craig.

Posted by: Matt | Apr 4, 2007 9:26:26 PM

Thanks, Matt. Minnie's cancer isn't getting any better. The tumor in her lung has doubled in size in the past six weeks. Between that and teaching, I've been pre-occupied. (Something on Hobbes in the coming weeks, I think.)

Posted by: Craig | Apr 4, 2007 9:38:37 PM

That anyone would have such a low opinion of themselves as to identify with its subject does seem rather odd (or at least it should).

Posted by: Matt | Apr 4, 2007 9:39:38 PM

Sorry to hear, Craig. Cancer's a real bitch. May be time to switch from philosophy to dog-blogging for a spell, around here, who knows.

Posted by: Matt | Apr 4, 2007 9:46:40 PM

Matt, it's fairly obvious that he's talking about what I wrote. Extremely petty, it is, but I don't expect any better. (From Craig, at least.) I could focus on how this isn't a case of my narcissism -- mention that he talks specifically about the material I cite, and castigate him for the dishonest refusal to address the conclusions I drew -- but he has other problems which, now communicated, would make me seem like a heartless, vindictive bully if I pursued the whole Craig-is-a-silly-thinker-with-a-grudge line. So I won't.

Posted by: SEK | Apr 4, 2007 10:11:47 PM

Scott, I read what you wrote, and still find Craig's post accurate. Sure, he "talks specifically about the material [you] [also] cite," so what?

One may also imagine that your conclusions (that is to say, Scull's conclusions) simply are not worth addressing.

Posted by: MAC | Apr 5, 2007 7:25:04 PM

If you'd read my post, "MAC," you'd know that my conclusions aren't coterminous with Scull's. Frankly, Craig's post isn't accurate: he acts as if no one has challenged Foucault's historiography outside of Madness and Civilization, which is either 1) dishonest or 2) evidence of Craig's limitations as a researcher (inasmuch as he would only have read material likely to confirm the opinion he already had).

Also, the claim that all these mean people are attacking Foucault's "dissertation" or "near-juvenalia" is disingenuous, because the book's still taught and cited regularly as authoritative, no matter what you call it. A much better tact would be to point out the numerous interviews in which Foucault distanced himself from the positions and methodology he espoused in Madness and Civilization; or talk about the multiple prefaces he wrote for it; or discuss its place in the once-longstanding feud between Foucault and Derrida.

I bring up later "Nietzsche, Genealogy, History" precisely because it makes a case for Foucault, inasmuch as what he said points to a sound practice. That he failed to live up to his own standards is an issue apart from whether those standards are worth defending. This is a simple point, but one which Craig completely misses, so blinded is he by his unearned sense of superiority.

Posted by: SEK | Apr 5, 2007 8:14:21 PM

A much better tact

I do not think this word means what you think it means.

Posted by: Jeff Seidman | Apr 5, 2007 9:57:26 PM

Yes, I seem to have written "tact" where I meant "tactic." My argument is demolished. I will scurry on now.

Posted by: SEK | Apr 5, 2007 10:26:22 PM

I think surely you meant, "tack."

Posted by: Jeff Seidman | Apr 5, 2007 10:40:51 PM

I'm fairly confident I meant "tactic," but I'm not sure I'd believe me.

Posted by: SEK | Apr 5, 2007 10:59:13 PM

J.... Jeff?

Posted by: ben wolfson | Apr 6, 2007 3:00:50 AM

tack:

4a. A course of action meant to minimize opposition to the attainment of a goal. b. An approach, especially one of a series of changing approaches.

Excerpted from The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language

And so 'tack' in this sense is similar to 'tactic.' There's a nautical element to this term, as my dictionary also points out:

"Nautical. To bring (a vessel) into the wind in order to change course or direction."

Posted by: Swifty | Apr 6, 2007 12:01:36 PM

Tack, as in, he was tacked to the wall, tacky.

The Skull controversy has indeed produced a great deal of acrimonious debate.

Posted by: Phlojo | Apr 6, 2007 12:47:24 PM

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