"Ways of reading panopticism ninth edition" Essays and Research Papers

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    Robin Relosa Abby Orenstein Panopticism Summary In Michel Foucault’s (1975) excerpt‚ Panopticism he states that the development of discipline in the 18th and 19th centuries came from he emergence of prison as the form of punishment for every crime. During these times the major crimes committed were from the French Revolution and the major riots and civil unrest in the French society. In these prisons the Panopticon puts the inmates in a different state in which each one is there own separate

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    Panopticism is like the design of Bentham prison Panopticon. The prison is “At the periphery‚ and annular building; at the center‚ a tower; this tower is pierced with wide windows that open onto the inner side of the ring‚ the periphery building is divided into cells‚ each of which extends the whole width of the building; they have two windows‚ one on the inside‚ corresponding to the windows of the tower; the other‚ on the outside‚ allows the light to cross the cell from one end to the other.” (Foucault

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    Holly Hickman English 201 4 February 2013 Panopticism According to Jeremy Bentham in 1791‚ a panopticon is a circular building with cells distributed around a central surveillance station. Some may refer to this structure as a prison or holding place of prisoners while on trial‚ and then some see it as a place for the exhibition of novelties. Panopticism is the idea that if you individualize the subjects by placing them in a state of constant visibility‚ then they will perform at their highest

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    Panopticism A historian‚ Michel Foucault‚ states his opinion on power and discipline. Panopticism means to view everything in one perspective. In similarly‚ many schools‚ industries‚ and business are under supervision but are still being watched. There are several ways to view a situation so let your brain explore. Foucault states that people should behave as if they are unaware of being watched; he describes how discipline‚ punishment‚ structure‚ control‚ power‚ and visibility will make today’s

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    Focault Panopticism "Our society is not one of spectacle‚ but of surveillance; under the surface of images‚ one invests bodies in depth; behind the great abstraction of exchange‚ there continues the meticulous concrete training of useful forces; the circuits of communication are the supports of an accumulation and a centralization of knowledge; the play of signs defines the anchorages of power; it is not that the beautiful totality of the individual is amputated‚ repressed‚ altered by our social

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    In his essay Panopticism‚ Focault gives support to the basic argument concerning the panopticon‚ that communication is key to knowledge. Within the panopticon‚ there is no communication among the prisoners or those who view them‚ He breaks down our social or economical systems and explains societies mentality on the law system. He answer the "why’s" in the way certain individuals act and think as they do . he also discusses Jeremy Benthams’s

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    Ways of Reading

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    the Soul by Richard E Miller has been written with a main point always in mind‚ that reading and writing has very powerful influences people and their imagination but‚ the act of reading and writing is not being utilized as much in the modern world. Richard has created an essay that proves his point by taking five very different short stories and giving each a twist that helps the reader see the power of reading. As the reader is chronologically going through the essay he or she is given many possible

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    anywhere in life. In “The Joy of Reading and Writing: Superman and Me‚” Sherman Alexie writes‚ “They carry neither pencil nor pen. They stare out the window. They refuse and resist.” This statement shows that many kids lost hope. Malcolm X and Sherman Alexie went against the grain and proved to society that where you come from doesn’t affect where you are going in life. Learning literature came about at different times for Sherman Alexie and Malcolm X. Alexie was reading high school level books at three

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    Panopticism Essay

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    Originally‚ Foucault described measures to take against a plague that occurred in the seventeenth century‚ in which stands as an image against which the idea of discipline was created. Panopticism‚ also referred to as disciplinary power‚ incorporates structures that help disciplinary power function‚ which include invisibility‚ self-monitoring‚ normalisation‚ and surveillance. As a result‚ the Panopticon was an architectural design put forth by Jeremy Bentham in the mid 19th century for prisons‚ insane

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    Totalitarianism. Totalitarianism left people’s rights behind and just focused on power and control of the party in charge. It developed from a theory on a way of controlling people‚ Panopticism‚ and was tweaked and modified by the two rulers because of its intenseness to make it suitable for their countries. Because of this still extreme way of governing‚ it brought along with it many critics and literature pieces written about its extremist qualities. One of the most famous of these authors is

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