4/13 Foucault

          The article “Truth and Power” by Michel Foucault deals with the understanding of how truth is perceived, manipulated, and transcribed into power. He discusses how truth is validated based on the background of the whomever produced it. In so, he describes political relations and scientific background of the person as the immediate perception of value to their proposed truths. Thus, he argues that one should not use science to back ideological contents or vice versa; instead, one should recognize the problem of “political, economic, [and] institutional regime of the production of power”(Foucault 43) influence the truth delivered to people. In short, the ones with power controls the truth, thus “the political problem…is truth itself”(Foucault 43). In understanding the effects of truth controlled by power, one can refer to Stuart Hall’s “Notes on deconstructing ‘popular culture’”. In it Hall discusses how industries with power can shape meanings and impose representations of culture upon the masses; in doing so, they have the potential to assert their ideologies or, comparatively, their “truth” into dominate culture. Thus, both authors would likely agree on the dangerous effects of the regimes power over the truth, and draw hypotheses on resolving the issue.

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