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Class notes for lecture 4 soci 326

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These are detailed student notes for Lecture 4 of Political Sociology, focusing on the theories of Michel Foucault and Robert Dahl. The notes are rewritten in clear, student-friendly language with examples and exam tips, making complex concepts easier to grasp. Topics included: Foucault’s theory of discourse and how language shapes reality The link between knowledge and power in institutions like schools and hospitals The concept of the episteme and how what counts as “truth” changes over time Foucault’s idea of biopolitics and government control over populations Why freedom does not mean power disappears in democracies Dahl’s five requirements of democracy: participation, voting equality, inclusion, agenda control, and enlightened understanding How Foucault and Dahl together highlight the challenges of achieving real democracy

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Uploaded on
September 19, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Matthew lange
Contains
Lecture 4

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Lecture 4 – Foucault & Democracy
Michel Foucault – Power & Knowledge
●​ Who he was: French philosopher/sociologist (1926–1984). Focused on how power
operates in subtle, hidden ways — not just through force, but through knowledge,
institutions, and everyday practices.​



Discourse

●​ Definition: A system of language, ideas, and practices that shape how we see reality.​

●​ Discourses don’t just describe things — they create categories (like “normal” vs
“abnormal”).​

●​ Power works through discourse by defining what is true and who gets to speak with
authority.​


Example: In medicine, the category of “mental illness” is created by experts. This discourse
defines who is sick, who needs treatment, and what counts as normal behavior.

Knowledge = Power

●​ Foucault argued that knowledge and power are inseparable.​

●​ Institutions (schools, hospitals, prisons, governments) create knowledge that orders
and disciplines people.​

●​ By controlling knowledge, they also control behavior.​


Example: School tests don’t just measure knowledge; they sort students into categories
(gifted, average, struggling), which affects their opportunities.

The Episteme

●​ Every historical period has an episteme → the underlying structure of thought that
defines what can be known and said.​

●​ These shift over time (e.g., medieval → enlightenment → modern science).​


Key point: What counts as “truth” is historically specific, not universal.
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