This paper explores the way Foucault’s thinking is entangled with efforts to think, to defend, and to critique the secular. On the one hand, Foucauldian genealogy and discourse analysis are at the heart Talal Asad’s critique of secularism. On the other hand, some of the most vocal critics of Asad and his followers are acolytes of the late Edward Said and adherents to his notion of “secular criticism.” This paper attempts to gather these two conflictual streams of Foucault reception and read them back into Foucault’s text. It then asks: what secular tropes are at work in the organization of Foucault’s thinking? Does some notion of the secular inform the way Foucault writes history, thinks between epistemes, and conceives his periodizations? Might there be a political theology at work in his ethics? The paper works up and works through this problem space.
Attached Paper
Annual Meeting 2024
A Foucauldian Secular?
Papers Session: Foucault, Islam, and Political Spirituality
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)