000 02086cam a2200193 4500500
005 20250121124544.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aBerlivet, Luc
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aThe Dynamics of “Biopolitics”: “Security Mechanisms” and “Subjectivation” Processes in the History of Healthcare
260 _c2014.
500 _a54
520 _aThis paper aims at contributing to ongoing reflections among historians on the empirical uses of Michel Foucault’s analyses by reflecting on a series of partly interrelated concepts that appeared at different moments in his work. The social reasons for and practicalities of contemporary “biopolitics” are analyzed through a study of the transformations of public health campaigns promoting preventive measures in France in the 20th century. I begin by briefly reassessing the evolution in the way health messages were conceived and various (audio) visual media were used, from the interwar period to the early 1970s. Then, I expound the context of the invention, a few years later, of a new form of public health action: the “large national campaign of prevention,” drawn from commercial advertising and road safety campaigns. Finally, I analyze the radical reframing of its communication strategy undertaken by the French Committee for Health Education, from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s, as well as the growing attention paid to assessing the reception of films and slogans by the “targeted public.” All these questions relating to the transformation of health communication over a few decades are examined through the prism of Foucauldian concepts such as: “security mechanisms” (as opposed to “discipline”), “problematization,” and “subjectivation.”
690 _a20th century
690 _aFrance
690 _apopulation
786 0 _nRevue d’histoire moderne & contemporaine | o 60-4/4 bis | 4 | 2014-02-01 | p. 97-121 | 0048-8003
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-moderne-et-contemporaine-2013-4-page-97?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c563177
_d563177