Archives of Infamy

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A32=Arlette Farge
A32=Jean-Philippe Guinle
A32=Lynne Huffer
A32=Michel Foucault
A32=Michel Heurteaux
A32=Pierre Nora
A32=Roger Chartier
A32=Stuart Elden
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Ancien Regime
Andre Bejin
archives
Arlette Farge
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B01=Nancy Luxon
B06=Thomas Scott-Railton
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Category=JPA
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Communications
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Disorderly Families
Elizabeth Wingrove
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family
Foucault
France
France Culture
gender
Gender and Sexuality Studies
gender relations
geography
history
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Law and Politics
letters of arrest
lettres de cachet
Michel Foucault's philosophy
Michel Rey
Michelle Perrot
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Nancy Luxon
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philosophy
Pierre Nora
police
political power
political theory
population
power
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Roger Chartier
social conflict
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sovereignty
Stuart Elden
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781517901103
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Aug 2019
  • Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Expanding the insights of Arlette Farge and Michel Foucault’s Disorderly Families into policing, public order, (in)justice, and daily life


What might it mean for ordinary people to intervene in the circulation of power between police and the streets, sovereigns and their subjects? How did the police come to understand themselves as responsible for the circulation of people as much as things—and to separate law and justice from the maintenance of a newly emergent civil order? These are among the many questions addressed in the interpretive essays in Archives of Infamy.

Crisscrossing the Atlantic to bring together unpublished radio broadcasts, book reviews, and essays by historians, geographers, and political theorists, Archives of Infamy provides historical and archival contexts to the recent translation of Disorderly Families by Arlette Farge and Michel Foucault. This volume includes new translations of key texts, including a radio address Foucault gave in 1983 that explains the writing process for Disorderly Families; two essays by Foucault not readily available in English; and a previously untranslated essay by Farge that describes how historians have appropriated Foucault.

Archives of Infamy pushes past old debates between philosophers and historians to offer a new perspective on the crystallization of ideas—of the family, gender relations, and political power—into social relationships and the regimes of power they engender. 

Contributors: Roger Chartier, Collège de France; Stuart Elden, U of Warwick; Arlette Farge, Centre national de recherche scientifique; Michel Foucault (1926–1984); Jean-Philippe Guinle, Catholic Institute of Paris; Michel Heurteaux; Pierre Nora, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales;  Michael Rey (1953–1993); Thomas Scott-Railton; Elizabeth Wingrove, U of Michigan.

Nancy Luxon is associate professor of political science at the University of Minnesota. She is author of Crisis of Authority: Politics, Trust, and Truth-Telling in Freud and Foucault and editor of Disorderly Families (Minnesota, 2016). 

Thomas Scott-Railton is a freelance French–English translator. He translated Disorderly Families by Arlette Farge and Michel Foucault (Minnesota, 2016).