{"id":736,"date":"2015-12-06T12:20:40","date_gmt":"2015-12-06T17:20:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/?p=736"},"modified":"2016-02-07T23:43:45","modified_gmt":"2016-02-08T04:43:45","slug":"foucault-713-from-counterhistory-to-counter-conduct-by-jeremy-kessler","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/2015\/12\/06\/foucault-713-from-counterhistory-to-counter-conduct-by-jeremy-kessler\/","title":{"rendered":"Jeremy Kessler From Counter-History to Counter-Conduct"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>1.\u00a0Michel Senellart\u2019s \u201cCourse Context\u201d to <em><a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/2015\/11\/28\/biblio-7-13\/\" target=\"_blank\">Security, Territory, Population<\/a> <\/em>(\u201cSTP\u201d) contains a fascinating tension, one that is nicely dramatized by Bernard Harcourt and Adam Tooze\u2019s differing interpretations of the relationship between Foucault\u2019s previous lecture series \u2013 <em>Society Must Be Defended <\/em>(\u201cSMBD\u201d) \u2013 and STP. On the one hand, Senellart discerns in STP\u2019s introduction of the concept of \u201cgovernmentality\u201d a \u201csudden[] shift\u201d and \u201ca sort of dramatic theoretical turn\u201d (STP 380). \u201c[I]n light of Foucault\u2019s later work,\u201d Senellart summarizes, \u201cit is tempting to see these lectures as the moment of a radical turning point at which the transition to the problematic of the \u2018government of the self and others\u2019 would begin. Breaking with the discourse of the \u2018battle\u2019 employed from the start of the 1970s [and reaching a crescendo in SMBD], the concept of \u2018government\u2019 would mark the first shift, becoming more pronounced from 1980, from the analytics of power to the ethics of the subject\u201d (STP 370). As elaborated in STP and the following year\u2019s <em>The Birth of Biopolitics<\/em>, the concept of governmentality is thus the operator that transforms the bellicose Foucault into the ethical Foucault.<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>On the other hand, Senellart insists on absolute methodological continuity:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>[T]he genealogy of the modern state [developed in <em>STP <\/em>and <em>BOB<\/em> via \u201cgovernmentality\u201d]. . . involves applying to the state the \u201cpoint of view\u201d [Foucault] had adopted previously in the study of the disciplines, separating out relations of power from any institutionalist or functionalist approach. . . . The problematic of \u201cgovernmentality\u201d therefore marks the entry of the question of the state into the field of analysis of micro-powers. . . . The analytical perspective of \u201cgovernmentality\u201d is not . . . a break in Foucault\u2019s work with regard to his earlier analysis of power, but is insert within the specific space opened by the problem of bio-power [introduced toward the end of SMBD]. So it would not be accurate to claim that from this time the concept of \u201cgovernment\u201d replaces that of \u201cpower,\u201d as if the latter now belonged to an outmoded problematic. The shift from \u201cpower\u201d to \u201cgovernment\u201d carried out in the 1978 lectures does not result from the methodological framework being called into question, but from its extension to a new object, the state, which did not have a places in the analysis of disciplines. [STP 380-382]<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/2015\/12\/09\/minerva\/\" target=\"_blank\">Bernard Harcourt<\/a>, like Senellart, finds in STP both an important shift in focus \u201cthat would preoccupy Foucault for the rest of the 1970s and early 1980s,\u201d and a clear methodological continuity. On the one hand, with the concept of governmentality, \u201cFoucault would liberate himself from the problem of \u2018the State\u2019 and of \u2018State apparatuses,\u2019 a problem that had preoccupied him for so long and so centrally\u201d in his dialogue with Marx and, especially, Althusser. \u201cFoucault would effectively overcome the problem of [Althusser\u2019s] repressive state apparatuses by means of the very notion of \u2018governmentality\u2019: with that discovery, the State became no more than one moment of the long history of the arts of governing.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>On the other hand, in Harcourt\u2019s view, this liberation is effected by the same methodology that Foucault had applied in earlier work: \u201cFoucault liberates himself from the notion of state apparatuses, in 1978, by going \u2018outside\u2019 (<em>\u00e0 l\u2019ext\u00e9rieure<\/em>) of the State, just as in <em>Discipline and Punish<\/em> he had gone \u2018outside\u2019 the prison.\u201d Reaching even further back in Foucault\u2019s <em>oeuvre<\/em>, Harcourt suggests that \u201cthe State, somewhat like the conception of Man in <em>The Order of Things<\/em>, becomes an object-subject that emerges in the history of the art of governing, but that is perhaps in the process of dissolving today \u2018just like, at the limit of the sea, a face drawn in the sand.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/2015\/12\/01\/foucault-713-adam-tooze-on-security-territory-and-population\/\" target=\"_blank\">Adam Tooze<\/a> resists Harcourt and Senellart\u2019s conclusion that STP represents a shift in object but not in methodology:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>[T]he notion of history described as a correlate of governmentality in STP is not the same as the notion of history emerging from the analysis of war in SMD. In this respect the movement between SMD and STP with regard to \u201chistory\u201d is analogous to the translation that was preformed on the concepts of \u201cthe economy\u201d and \u201cwar\u201d. In part this is a matter of a shift of analytical object.<em><strong> But the challenge posed by SMD \u2013 \u201cwe must try to be historicists\u201d \u2013 was presumably a general methodological injunction.<\/strong> [emphases added]<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>I do not think this disagreement between Tooze on the one hand and Harcourt and Senellart on the other is a disagreement about \u201cmere\u201d methodology. Just as for Foucault the question of methodology is always a fundamentally political question (on which more in a moment), the debate over whether STP represents a methodological break is a fundamentally political debate. We can begin to discern the political contours of this debate in the opposing conclusions that Harcourt and Tooze draw from their comparisons of STP with <em>The Order of Things<\/em>.<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>[T]he State, somewhat like the conception of Man in The Order of Things, becomes an object-subject that emerges in the history of the art of governing, but that is perhaps in the process of dissolving today \u201cjust like, at the limit of the sea, a face drawn in the sand.\u201d (Harcourt)<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>There is no sense in these lectures of the kind of historic threshold, or a threshold of history itself that gave the Order of Things such drama. Order of Things promised the end of historic man. There is no promise here of the end of governmentality . . . . (Tooze)<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Notably, for Harcourt, the dissolution of the \u201cState\u201d within the broader \u201chistory of the art of governing\u201d is analogous to the dissolution of man prophesied at the end of <em>The Order of Things<\/em>. For Tooze, it is \u201cgovernmentality\u201d <em>itself<\/em> \u2013\u201cthe history of the art of governing\u201d \u2013 that would have to dissolve for the analogy to hold. Harcourt and Tooze <em>share<\/em> the sense that, according to STP, \u201cgovernmentality\u201d or \u201cthe history of the art of governing\u201d isn\u2019t going anywhere. But for Tooze, this infinity of governmentality defaults on the rupture promised at the end of <em>The Order of Things<\/em>. For Harcourt, on the other hand, the history of the art of governing is one more iteration or application of the genealogical method that Foucault has been developing more or less continuously since <em>The Order of Things<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>How to make sense of these different stances? I suspect that the key lies in the concept of \u201ccounter-history\u201d (<em>contre-histoire<\/em>) that Foucault introduces in SMBD but is nowhere to be found in STP, save for the verbal echo produced by the functionally distinct concept, \u201ccounter-conduct\u201d (<em>contre-conduite<\/em>).<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em>2.\u00a0<\/em>In SMBD, Foucault defines \u201ccounter-history\u201d in tandem with the discourse of \u201crace war\u201d that emerged in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries \u2013 \u201cthe first discourse in postmedieval Western society that that can be strictly described as being historico-political\u201d (52, 66). The discourse of race war is \u201chistorico-political\u201d because \u201cthe subject who speaks in this discourse, who says \u2018I\u2019 or \u2018we,\u2019 cannot, and is in fact not trying to, occupy the position of the jurist or the philosopher, or in other words the position of a universalist, totalizing, or neutral subject\u201d (52). The \u201chistorico-political\u201d discourse of race war is thus directly opposed to the \u201cphilosophico-juridical discourse\u201d that \u201c[e]ver since Greek philosophy . . . has always worked with the assumption of a pacified universality\u201d (53). This opposition is possible because in the discourse of race war, \u201cthe person who is speaking, telling the truth, recounting the story, rediscovering memories and trying not to forget anything . . . is inevitably on one side or the other; he is involved in the battle, has adversaries, and is working toward a particular victory\u201d (52).<\/p>\n<p>When this <em>partisan <\/em>speaker speaks of \u201cright,\u201d it is not the right of \u201cjuridical universality,\u201d and when she speaks of \u201ctruth,\u201d it is not \u201cthe universal truth of the philosopher.\u201d Although the discourse of race war is a \u201cdiscourse about the general war . . . the war beneath the peace\u201d of society itself, and although it is \u201can attempt to describe the battle as a whole,\u201d \u201cthat does not make it a totalizing or neutral discourse; it is always a perspectival discourse. The truth is . . . a truth that can be deployed only from its combat position, from the perspective of the sought for victory and ultimately, so to speak, of the survival of the speaking subject himself\u201d (52).<\/p>\n<p>Not only is the discourse of race war <em>anti-philosophical<\/em>, it is also \u201ccounter-historical\u201d because it is the first discourse to <em>counter<\/em> the \u201chistory\u201d that dominated antiquity and the Middle Ages. This prior \u201chistory\u201d \u2013 which was not a properly \u201chistorico-political discourse\u201d \u2013 was the history of \u201claw and glory,\u201d the \u201chistory of sovereignty,\u201d the history that sovereignty tells about itself to itself (66-69). What race war does \u2013 what makes it a \u201ccounter-history\u201d as well as an anti-philosophy \u2013 is reject the core postulate of this \u201chistory of sovereignty\u201d: \u201c[t]he postulate that the history of great men contains, a fortiori, the history of lesser men, or that the history of the strong is also the history of the weak.\u201d In place of this postulate of historical totalization, race war poses \u201cthe postulate that \u201c[t]he history of some is not the history of others\u201d (69). Just as race war\u2019s perspectivalism and partisanship disrupt \u201cjuridico-philosophical universality,\u201d this partisan postulate, this postulate that <em>is<\/em> counter-history, disrupts the old, totalizing history of sovereignty, and shatters \u201cthe unity of the city, the nation, or the State.\u201d Counter-history performs this dis-uniting, de-totalizing work \u201cfrom the side that is in darkness, from within the shadows\u201d (70). The discourse of counter-history\/race war is \u201cthe discourse of those who have no glory, or those who have lost it and who find themselves, perhaps for a time \u2013 but probably for a long time \u2013 in darkness and silence.\u201d At the hour when the counterhistorical subject does, eventually, break this silence and speak, she \u201cspeaks of legitimate rights solely in order to declare war on law\u201d and, in doing so, \u201ctears society apart\u201d (73).<\/p>\n<p>In these pages, Foucault is describing a historical object \u2013 the discourse of race war and the practice of counter-history that emerged in the early modern period, and then paved the way for \u201cthe idea of revolution\u201d which would captivate the West for more than two hundred years (78-79). Yet it is striking how resonant Foucault\u2019s historical description of race war\/counter-history is with his methodological and political description of \u201cgenealogy\u201d in the first lecture of SMBD. There, he writes that genealogy \u201callows us to constitute a historical knowledge of struggles and to make use of that knowledge in contemporary tactics\u201d (8). \u201cGenealogies are, quite specifically, antisciences\u201d (9). Genealogies \u201care about the insurrection of knowledges,\u201d \u201can insurrection against the centralizing power-effects that are bound up with the institutionalization and workings of scientific discourse organized in a society such as ours.\u201d \u201cCompared to the attempt to inscribe knowledges in the power-hierarchy typical of science, genealogy is . . . a sort of attempt to desubjugate historical knowledges, to set them free, or in other words to enable them to oppose and struggle against the coercion of a unitary, formal, and scientific theoretical discourse\u201d (10). Genealogy, in short, is an attempt to unleash forgotten pasts on the present, and thereby resist the centralization of power and knowledge enforced by contemporary science and society. As Tooze notes, Foucault will later in SMBD issue the injunction, \u201cwe must try to be historicists\u201d (173). He might also have said, \u201cwe must try to be counter-historians.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>And yet. Foucault\u2019s historical recovery of race war and counter-history \u2013 his whole engagement with the imbrication of history and war that is the motor of SMBD \u2013 was occasioned at the outset by a <em>doubt <\/em>about the power of genealogy. In the introductory lecture, where Foucault defined genealogy in such counter-historical terms as the redeployment of subjugated knowledges for the purpose of present struggle, he also asked of these subjugated knowledges, \u201cWhat strength do they have in themselves?\u201d (11) Alluding to \u201ca certain number of . . . changes in the conjuncture,\u201d Foucault wondered whether the current \u201crelationship of force\u201d would \u201callow us to exploit the knowledges we have dug out of the sand, to exploit them as they stand, without their becoming subjugated once more? . . . Given that we are talking about a battle \u2013 the battle knowledges are waging against the power-effects of scientific discourse \u2013 it is probably overoptimistic to assume our adversary\u2019s silence proves that he is afraid of us\u201d (11-12).<\/p>\n<p>It was this set of anxieties that led Foucault to ask at the end of the first lecture, \u201cAre we really talking about war when we analyze the workings of power? Are the notions of \u2018tactics,\u2019 \u2018strategy,\u2019 and \u2018relations of force\u2019 valid? To what extent are they valid?\u201d (18) And it was this set of questions that led Foucault to the stunning historical excavation that constitutes the bulk of SMBD. Yet there is little reason to believe that this historical inquiry produced affirmative answers.<\/p>\n<p>The lectures end with a description of how the French bourgeoisie \u2013 the revolutionary party \u2013 engaged in a \u201cself-dialecticalization of historical discourse\u201d (237), a self-dialecticalization of the race war\/counter-history doublet. This twisted procedure gave rise to the merger of history \u2013 the original anti-philosophical discourse \u2013 with philosophy in the form of the dialectic, and the merger of race war \u2013 the original anti-sovereigntist discourse \u2013 with the State in the form of biological racism (233-263). These events, in turn, cast an evil glow on the bellicose language of \u201cstruggle\u201d and \u201cadversity\u201d that Foucault used to describe \u201cgenealogy\u201d in the first lecture of SMBD.<\/p>\n<p>Indeed, Foucault concludes by remarking on something \u201cthat has caused [him] problems for a long time\u201d: \u201cWhenever . . . socialism has been forced to stress the problem of struggle, the struggle against the enemy . . . racism does raise its head. . . . Once it is a matter of coming to terms with the thought of a one-to-one encounter with the adversary, and with the need to fight him physically, to risk one\u2019s own life and to try to kill him, there is a need for racism\u201d (262). Foucault thus began SMBD by wondering whether his \u201cscattered genealogies\u201d were strong enough to persist in their \u201cinsurrection\u201d against the \u201cadversary\u201d of \u201cthe centralizing power-effects that are bound up with the institutionalization and workings of scientific discourse organized in a society such as ours\u201d (9-12). But he ends by suggesting that this very style of thought flirts with racist eliminationism.<\/p>\n<p>This epochal and ethical foreclosure of race war\/counter-history as a potential historico-political basis for genealogy raises a real question about the method\u2019s continuing viability. Foucault\u2019s inquiry into race war and counteryhistory was sparked by an anxiety about the potential powerlessness of genealogy in the face of its brooding adversary. The inquiry concluded by indicting the antagonism that gave rise to the anxiety in the first place. Either too weak or too strong, genealogy would seem to be a poor fit for the present \u201cconjuncture.\u201d<em>\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n<p>3. The language of \u201cgenealogy\u201d is not, of course, absent in STP. Far from it. But the question \u2013 as posed by Foucault himself in the introductory lecture of SMBD \u2013 is whether STP\u2019s genealogy has evaded the danger of being \u201crecoded\u201d or \u201crecolonized\u201d by \u201cunitary discourses,\u201d \u201creannex[ed]\u201d by \u201ctheir own power-knowledge effects\u201d (SMBD 11). The methodological version of this question, as suggested by Harcourt and Tooze\u2019s exchange, is whether there is a genealogy <em>of<\/em> governmentality in STP, or whether governmentality \u2013 the unitary discourse of Foucault\u2019s present \u2013 has simply recoded \u201cgenealogy\u201d as the story of governmentality\u2019s sovereign march through time.<\/p>\n<p>The political version of the question is perhaps more obvious: whether Foucault\u2019s identification of physical violence with biological racism at the end of SMBD was the harbinger of a potent de-radicalization. The Deleuze-Foucault split over the question of terrorism is one contextual road to go down (STP 373-374, 393 n. 26), though textual evidence provides surer and less controversial footing.<\/p>\n<p>As I hope to expand upon in my ten minutes at the opening of the seminar, the contrast between SMBD\u2019s \u201ccounter-history\u201d and STP\u2019s \u201ccounter-conduct\u201d indicates a fundamental trimming of the sails, politically speaking. Recall that the basic political function of counter-history was to deny the postulate of the \u201chistory of sovereignty,\u201d \u201cthe postulate that the history of great men contains, a fortiori, the history of lesser men, or that the history of the strong is also the history of the weak\u201d (SMBD 69). The denial of this postulate does not privilege one part of the socio-political whole over other parts of the socio-political whole, but denies the reality of the socio-political whole. In insisting on the alternative postulate that \u201c[t]he history of some is not the history of others\u201d (69), counter-history \u201ctears society part\u201d (73). STP repeatedly forecloses this exteriority opened up by counter-history. The most striking affirmation of this foreclosure occurs on the penultimate page of the lectures, where Foucault endorses a restatement of the postulate of the \u201chistory of sovereignty\u201d that counter-history emphatically denied:<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Whether one opposes civil society to the state, the population to the state, or the nation to the state, it was in any case these elements that were in fact put to work within this genesis of the state, and of the modern state. It is therefore these elements that will be at issue and serve as the stake for both the state and for what is opposed to it. <strong>To that extent, <em>the history of <\/em>raison d\u2019\u00c9tat<em>, the history of the governmental <\/em>ratio<em>, and the history of counter-conducts opposed to it,<\/em> <em>are inseparable from each other.<\/em> <\/strong>[STP 357, emphases added]<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Well before this there-is-no-alternative summation, however, Foucault makes clear that counter-conduct is always locked in a <em>dialectic<\/em> with conduct \u2013 that conduct and counter-conduct are co-constituents of the socio-political whole, just as the <em>coup d\u2019<\/em><em>\u00c9<\/em><em>tat<\/em> is utterly consonant with <em>raison d\u2019<\/em><em>\u00c9<\/em><em>tat<\/em> (261). For instance, in his introductory lecture on counter-conduct in the context of the Christian pastorate, Foucault writes:<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>I wanted to show you that generally speaking these themes that have been fundamental elements in these counter-conducts are <strong><em>clearly not absolutely external<\/em><\/strong> to Christianity, but are actually border-elements . . . which have been continually re-utilized, re-implanted, and taken up again in one or another direction, and these elements . . . have been continually taken up by the Church itself. [214-215, emphasis added]<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>To make sure we do not miss the point, Foucault reiterates, vis-\u00e0-vis the Reformation and Counter-Reformation, that \u201cthe struggle was not conducted in the form of absolute exteriority, but rather in the form of the permanent use of tactical elements that are pertinent in the anti-pastoral struggle, insofar as they fall within, in a marginal way, the general horizon of Christianity\u201d (215).<\/p>\n<p>Notably, the closest Foucault comes to recognizing an instance of \u201cabsolute exteriority\u201d is the <em>pacifist<\/em> act of \u201c[r]efusing to be a soldier . . . refusing to bear arms,\u201d which he characterizes \u201cas a form of conduct or as a moral counter-conduct, as a refusal of civic education, of society\u2019s values, and also a refusal of a certain obligatory relationship to the nation and the nation\u2019s salvation, as a refusal of the actual political system of the nation, <em>and as a refusal of the relationship to the death of others and of oneself<\/em>\u201d (198). Thus, in STP, counter-conduct comes closest to achieving counter-history\u2019s bellicose denial of the socio-political whole only where it <em>renounces<\/em> physical violence \u2013 only where it renounces that \u201cone-to-one encounter with the adversary . . . the need to fight him physically, to risk one\u2019s own life and to try to kill him\u201d which Foucault associated irremediably with \u201cracism\u201d at the close of the preceding lectures (SMBD 262).<\/p>\n<p>This pacification of Foucault\u2019s thought leads me to a final remark on the relationship between Foucault and Althusser. I am not sure that Foucault\u2019s turn to governmentality can really liberate him from the problem of the \u201cstate apparatus,\u201d but at the same time I am not sure that the \u201cstate apparatus\u201d <em>as such<\/em> was ever a problem for Foucault. Certainly, there is plenty of room in STP for the empirical fact of the hard core of the repressive state apparatus \u2013 e.g., the \u201cpermanent military apparatus\u201d (STP 305). Rather, I think that what Foucault\u2019s concept of governmentality does vis-\u00e0-vis Althusser is collapse the distinction between \u201cstate apparatus\u201d and \u201cstate power.\u201d<a href=\"#_ftn1\" name=\"_ftnref1\">[1]<\/a> It is \u201cstate power\u201d that is really the problem for Foucault, especially in the wake of SMBD, because it is by seizing state power that a revolutionary subject may go <em>outside <\/em>the state apparatus and reconstitute it. In this respect, SMBD\u2019s \u201ccounter-history\u201d \u2013 violent figure of exteriority and root of revolution \u2013 may have been a nagging vestige of \u201cstate power.\u201d With the translation of counter-history into counter-conduct, and counter-conduct\u2019s incorporation within the trans-historical expanse of governmentality, there is no longer any gap between state power and state apparatus, no longer any question about who constitutes what. Perhaps, in this sense, Foucault has overcome the problem of the state. But I do not think he has done so by going <em>outside <\/em>the state, as in a traditional genealogy; rather, governmentality may represent Foucault\u2019s adoption of the state\u2019s point of view.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref1\" name=\"_ftn1\">[1]<\/a> Louis Althusser, <em>On the Reproduction of Capitalism<\/em> 73-74 (2014).<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&nbsp; 1.\u00a0Michel Senellart\u2019s \u201cCourse Context\u201d to Security, Territory, Population (\u201cSTP\u201d) contains a fascinating tension, one that is nicely dramatized by Bernard Harcourt and Adam Tooze\u2019s differing interpretations of the relationship between Foucault\u2019s previous lecture series \u2013 Society Must Be Defended&hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/2015\/12\/06\/foucault-713-from-counterhistory-to-counter-conduct-by-jeremy-kessler\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue Reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1680,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[38941,38972],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-736","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-foucault-713","category-posts-7-13"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/736","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1680"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=736"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/736\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=736"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=736"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/foucault1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=736"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}