English 102: JC Clapp

Foucault’s Panopticism: List of Terms

Note: Definitions are not precise. Words and definitions are listed in the approximate order they appear in the text.

“the gaze”: to look steadily intently and with fixed intention (315)

centralized: organized under one control (315)

bureaucracy: a body of non-elected officials in a government (315)

center: middle point, central point or place (316)

periphery: the outer part, boundary, or edge (316)

disciplinary mechanism: an ordered system of controlled behavior (316)

hierarchy/hierarchical: an authoritative body or group of things arranged in successive order – like a chain of command (316)

omnipresent: present in all places at the same time (316)

omniscient: knowing all things (316)

capillary: small portion of power – a tiny portion of the whole (316)

vagabondage: a nomad or wandering traveler (316)

desertions: abandonments – to abandon something is to desert it (316)

object : something mental or physical toward which thought, feeling, or action is directed (319)

subject : one that is placed under authority, control, or focus (319)

surveillance: close watch kept over someone or something (319)

axial: perpendicular to the plane of a cyclic structure (319)

contagion: a : rapid communication of an influence (as a doctrine or emotional state) b : an influence that spreads rapidly (a virus or bacteria) (319)

locus: : a center of activity, attention, or concentration (319)

sequestered : to set apart or seclude (319)

apparatus: equipment for a specific task – a tool (319)

heterogeneous: consisting of dissimilar or diverse parts

envisage: to form a mental picture of (to view or see) (320)

perversity: something that is stubbornly determined not to do what is expected (321)

dyad: two individuals in a social relationship – a pair (321)

manifested: having been shown plainly apparent (321)

homogeneous: of the same or a similar kind or nature (322)

noncorporal: absence of physical punishment or force (323)

principle of his own subjection: keeping yourself under control – self-regulation (323)

menagerie: a collection of wild animals on exhibition (323)

salon: a large room used for receiving and entertaining guests (323)

furtive: marked by stealth – sly

miasmas: unhealthy vapors

mechanisms of observation: methods of watching things (324)

utopia: a perfect, ideal space or place (325)

polyvalent: serves for a variety of reasons – not just one (325)

mechanism of power: power machine – methods of maintaining power (325)

political anatomy: detailed analysis or examination of a political structure (327)

network of mechanism: network of working parts of a whole (327)

network: intricate system (328)

discipline-mechanism: way of training that produces obedience (328)

sectors of society: parts or sections of society – a class system (329)

larceny: unlawful taking of personal property – stealing (329)

brigand/brigandage: bandit – one who lives by plunder and is usually a member of a gang (329)

licentiousness: the trait of having total disregard for strict rules of connections (330)

interstitial: reaching into small spaces (332)

metadiscipline: above and beyond normal discipline- a kind of philosophy of discipline (332)

disciplinary society: a society built upon discipline, as if in martial law. (333)

civilization of spectacle: a society which everything is placed for the viewing pleasure of many (333)

schemata: a mental codification of experience that includes a particular organized way perceiving cognitively and responding to a complex situation or set of stimuli. (332)

codification: to make a code out of something (part of schemata)

cognitively: based on or capable of being reduced to empirical factual knowledge (part of schemata)

empirical: originating in or based on observation or experience that can be proved or disproved by these things (part of schemata)

infrapenality: an area within which people are subject to become penalized (punished). (332)

Ecclesiastical: of or relating to a church (335)

circumvent: to make a circle around – to go around

juridico-political structures: existing power structures that compel people to obey laws that are made for them (337)

infralaw: all the different powers that help our society to move along smoothly (338)

infinitesimal: teeny tiny – every little bit (338)

counterlaw: going against the powers of society (338)

reciprocity: mutual exchange of privilege

epistemology: the study of knowledge and the study of how we know what we know

egalitarian: on the premise of equality

coercion: to force somebody to do something – to dominate with force

physic-political technique: a mechanism of small techniques of discipline

inglorious: dishonorable – not glorious