Michel Foucault - Vigilar y Castigar - Parte 1: SUPLICIO

37min 37s
3 décembre 2020

Description

Si te sirvió el contenido, podés invitarme a un cafecito. ¡Es muy fácil! sólo le das click al siguiente enlace. https://cafecito.app/elprofelucas Tu ayuda es muy importante para poder seguir haciendo videos. 03:07 Capítulo 1. El cuerpo de los condenados 21:33 Capítulo 2. La resonancia de los suplicios La obra de Michel Foucault (1926-1984) es, sin dudas, de lectura imprescindible a la hora de analizar la sociedad disciplinaria, el control, el poder, la vigilancia, las instituciones modernas y el panóptismo. En este video, trabajaremos la primer parte (Suplicio) de un libro ya clásico: Vigilar y Castigar (1975). Se agradece el comentario, la pregunta, el aporte. Contacto: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lucas.silva1 Instagram: - historiasilvalucas - cocogesilva

Résumé

🔍 This video is a summary and analysis of the first two chapters of Michel Foucault's classic work "Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison". The key points covered are:

  1. The chapter "The Body of the Condemned" examines the public spectacle of torture and execution in the pre-Revolutionary French justice system. Foucault describes in graphic detail the 1757 execution of Damiens the regicide, where his body was torn apart by horses. This exemplifies the brutality and public humiliation of the "supplice" (punishment) at that time.

  2. In contrast, Foucault then discusses the 1791 French penal code which mandated a quick, painless execution by guillotine. This represented a shift away from public torture towards a more "humane" form of capital punishment, though the spectacle of execution remained.

  3. Foucault argues this transition was not driven by humanitarian concerns, but by the state's desire to maintain control and avoid the risk of the public spectacle turning against the authorities. The supplice risked generating sympathy for the condemned rather than fear of the sovereign's power.

  4. The chapter "The Spectacle of the Scaffold" further explores how the public ritual of punishment began to be seen as problematic, as it could be "inverted" by the very people it was meant to terrorize. Crowds would gather to jeer at the executioner and express defiance against the state.

  5. Foucault highlights how this led to a shift towards more hidden, disciplinary forms of punishment, with the rise of the prison system. The focus moved from the condemned body to the "soul" - controlling the individual through constant surveillance and normalization rather than public torture.

  6. Overall, these chapters trace the transformation of the penal system, from public spectacles of torture to the emergence of the modern prison - a shift that was driven more by concerns about power and control than by humanitarian impulses.

🔑 The key ideas are Foucault's analysis of the transition from public "supplice" to more hidden, disciplinary forms of punishment, and his argument that this was fundamentally about the exercise of power by the state, rather than simply humanitarian reform.


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