
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Last December Liz Truss made a speech. The Minister for Women and Equalities spoke about her memories of being at school in Leeds. She was taught about sexism and racism, she said, but not enough time was spent on being taught how to read and write. "These ideas," said Truss, "have their roots in post-modernist philosophy - pioneered by Foucault - that put societal power structures and labels ahead of individuals and their endeavours."
So do Foucault's ideas pose a real danger to social and cultural life in Britain? Or is he a "bogeyman" deployed by some politicians to divide and distract us from real issues?
In this edition of Analysis, writer and academic Shahidha Bari tries to make sense of Foucault's influence in the UK - and asks whether his ideas really do have an effect on Britain today.
Producer: Ant Adeane
Contributors:
Agnes Poirier, journalist and author of Left Bank: Art, Passion, and the Rebirth of Paris, 1940-50
Michael Drolet, Senior Research Fellow in the History of Political Thought, Worcester College, University of Oxford
Lisa Downing, Professor of French Discourses of Sexuality at the University of Birmingham
Richard Whatmore, Professor of Modern History at the University of St Andrews and Co-Director of the Institute of Intellectual History
Matthew Goodwin, Professor of Politics in the School of Politics and International Relations at the University of Kent
Clare Chambers, Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Cambridge
Charlotte Riley, Lecturer in Twentieth-Century British History at the University of Southampton
By BBC Radio 44.6
195195 ratings
Last December Liz Truss made a speech. The Minister for Women and Equalities spoke about her memories of being at school in Leeds. She was taught about sexism and racism, she said, but not enough time was spent on being taught how to read and write. "These ideas," said Truss, "have their roots in post-modernist philosophy - pioneered by Foucault - that put societal power structures and labels ahead of individuals and their endeavours."
So do Foucault's ideas pose a real danger to social and cultural life in Britain? Or is he a "bogeyman" deployed by some politicians to divide and distract us from real issues?
In this edition of Analysis, writer and academic Shahidha Bari tries to make sense of Foucault's influence in the UK - and asks whether his ideas really do have an effect on Britain today.
Producer: Ant Adeane
Contributors:
Agnes Poirier, journalist and author of Left Bank: Art, Passion, and the Rebirth of Paris, 1940-50
Michael Drolet, Senior Research Fellow in the History of Political Thought, Worcester College, University of Oxford
Lisa Downing, Professor of French Discourses of Sexuality at the University of Birmingham
Richard Whatmore, Professor of Modern History at the University of St Andrews and Co-Director of the Institute of Intellectual History
Matthew Goodwin, Professor of Politics in the School of Politics and International Relations at the University of Kent
Clare Chambers, Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Cambridge
Charlotte Riley, Lecturer in Twentieth-Century British History at the University of Southampton

7,608 Listeners

378 Listeners

891 Listeners

1,061 Listeners

219 Listeners

5,469 Listeners

1,802 Listeners

1,878 Listeners

1,747 Listeners

1,041 Listeners

2,120 Listeners

2,085 Listeners

107 Listeners

33 Listeners

403 Listeners

70 Listeners

744 Listeners

161 Listeners

41 Listeners

139 Listeners

74 Listeners

3,201 Listeners

1,032 Listeners

38 Listeners

50 Listeners