Archaeological Methodology: Foucault and the History of Systems of Thought
Postdoc Troels Krarup has contributed to the journal Theory, Culture & Society with article 'Archaeological Methodology: Foucault and the History of Systems of Thought’.
The article looks into and develops Foucault’s archaeological methodology based on the fact that existing accounts of Foucault’s archaeological methodology have not (a) contextualised the concept properly within the intellectual field of its emergence and (b) explained why it is called ‘archaeology’ and not simply ‘history’.
Foucault contributed to the field of ‘history of systems of thought’ in France around 1960 by broadening its scope from the study of scientific and philosophical systems into systems of ‘knowledge’ in a wider sense.
For Foucault, the term ‘archaeology’ provided a response to new methodological questions arising from this initiative. Archaeological methodology had already been developed into a distinct comparative approach for the study of linguistic and cultural systems, notably by Dumézil. Foucault redevised archaeological methodology for the post-Hegelian tradition of studying ‘problems’ prevalent in the history of systems of thought.
The article thus furnishes the groundwork for a ‘sociological archaeology’ or ‘problem analysis’ that is not particularly dependent on Foucault as a social theorist of power.
Get access to the article: Archaeological Methodology: Foucault and the History of Systems of Thought
See Troels Krarup's own video presentation of his new article on Theory, Culture & Society's YouTube channel: