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Foucault
Abstract
We revisit Lukes’ third face of power, arguing its key element is the recognition that
agents can be influenced by structures/ideas in ways of which they are unaware. We
argue that work Bourdieu’s and Foucault’s work offer fruitful ways of exploring this
‘preconscious’ dimension. Using Bourdieu’s work, the core of any understanding of
the third face is rooted in the relationship between the social field and the habitus,
while, for Foucault, the focus is upon the construction of the subject and her
preferences in relation to the ongoing production of power. We subsequently explore
the differences between their positions.
The question of political power never goes away, neither do the problems involved in
conceptualisng and measuring it. In this context, our aim is to revisit the ‘faces of
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power’ argument, most associated with Lukes (1974; 2005), which, in our view, is
crucial to any attempt to conceptualise power. The strength of Lukes’ position was his
recognition that power was not always directly exercised by an individual, or group,
persuading or forcing others to act in a way in which they otherwise wouldn’t have
done. The weakness of Lukes’ position was that his consideration of what he termed
the ‘third face of power’ (most often seen as preference-shaping) was under-
developed. Our aim here is to help remedy that omission by offering two, related,
defences of Lukes’ position, a Bourdieusian approach and a Foucauldian approach.
Both, in different, but we would argue related, ways suggest that agents are not the
all-reflexive individuals posited in most of the contemporary literature on agency.
Rather, they operate within a habitus, for Bourdieu, or the social unconscious, for
Foucault; so both are positing a preconscious element which shapes individuals’
preferences and actions. We explore how each of these approaches can address the
most common critiques of Lukes, highlighting both the similarities and differences
between them. As such, this paper is divided into six substantive sections. The first
section briefly outlines Lukes’ argument, before the second section considers the main
critiques of it and the third briefly outlines the ways in which one can respond to such
critiques using a Bourdieusian or a Foucauldian perspective. Section four and five
then look at how a Bourdieusian and a Foucauldian approach respectively can be used
to underpin an understanding of the third face of power. The final substantive section
then focuses more specifically on the similarities and differences between the two
positions.
The pluralists to whom Lukes was responding were more likely to talk of influence
than power, and, following Dahl (1961), suggest that an interest group has influence
over the government in so far as it can make the government do something it wouldn’t
otherwise have done (a definition, of course, that has its origins in Weber). The key
point here is that Dahl, like most other students of politics, thought that power was
manifested in the influence that groups had over government policy, although he
argued that, empirically, power in advanced liberal democracies like the US was
diffuse, not concentrated, a point many have endorsed, although with certain
qualifications.
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Lukes saw Dahl’s approach as rooted in what he termed the first face of power, which
involves an investigation of ‘who gets what, when and how’. This is normally termed
a decision-making approach. The analytical implication of this narrow approach,
however, was soon challenged by Bachrach and Baratz (1962), for ignoring ‘what
does not happen’ in the decision-making process. They maintained that power is
exercised, not just when making decisions, but also by excluding certain issues and
participants from decision-making altogether. As such, for them, a study of power
should focus not only on ‘who gets what, when and how’, but also on ‘who gets left
out and how’. This is normally termed the agenda-setting approach. Here, non-
participation in decision-making was explicitly related to power, with marginalisation
no longer the result of individual apathy, but rather a product of actors’ control over
what was on the public agenda. A good example here, which is well-documented,
would be UK agricultural policy between the 1930s and the 1980s. During this
period, there was a tight institutional link, often called a policy community, between
the Government, specifically the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Fisheries and the
National Farmers’ Union (Smith, 1990). Basically, this policy community negotiated
about the level of production and state subsidies in an Annual Price Review.
However, there was clear agreement between both parties on the broad policy, which
was to grant farmers high subsidies in order to ensure high production. To put it
another way, the policy options were constrained by a consensus about the boundary
of the policy agenda, which reflected the power of farmers.
Lukes emphasised that there was a third face of power, normally seen as involving
preference-shaping, but called by Johal, Moran and Williams (2014) ‘hegemonic
power’, which, in our view, seems a more accurate term. Of course, this is the most
contentious face. Here, the argument is that the whole policy debate occurs within a
social, cultural, economic, political and institutional framework which favours some
interests over others. This position was often Marxist and rested to a significant extent
on the contested idea of ‘real interests’. Here, citizens, especially disadvantaged
citizens, are seen as socialised into a partial, even ‘false’, view of their own interests;
a view which serves the interests of those who are powerful. So, as an example, it
might be argued that, in patriarchal societies, women are socialised into accepting
gender roles which constrain their opportunities. It is with this aspect of Lukes’
argument that many critics take most issue.
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2) Hay on Lukes and the Third Face of Power
There have been a number of critiques of, and response to, Lukes’ position
(Bradshaw, 1976; Ward, 1987; Hay, 2002; Guzzini, 2005; Dowding, 2006), but, given
space constraints, we don’t explore them all here. Rather, we focus on Hay’s (2002)
argument, which we would suggest is fairly representative of many of the critiques.
Hay outlines Lukes argument in a clear and concise way, locating it within the context
of the development of pluralist and behaviouralist Political Sociology. As indicated,
he engages most critically with Lukes’ discussion of the third face, which he rejects
for two, related, reasons. First, he is very critical of the idea of ‘false consciousness’;
that is Lukes’ attempt to distinguish between subjective and ‘real’ (objective)
interests. Second, he argues that Lukes conflates empirical/behavioural and
normative/political conceptions of power. We briefly consider each of these critiques.
Hay totally rejects the idea of ‘false consciousness’, which he finds ‘logically
unsustainable and politically offensive’ (Hay, 2002, 179). More specifically, he asks
the question: ‘Who is to know what (an agent’s) interests are if he is capable of
misperceiving them’ (Hay, 2002, 179). Or, to put it another way, on what basis can an
observer claim that s/he has privileged access to knowledge of an agents ‘real’
interests. This argument, of course, raises ontological, epistemological and
methodological issues, as indeed does his second point.
Hay also contends that Lukes conflates analysis and critique when discussing power.
So, he argues (Hay, 2002, 183) that, within Lukes’ schema: ‘power is not so much an
analytical category as a critical category whose identification is reliant upon an
irredeemably normative judgement.’ To Hay, Lukes’ conception of power is negative
and, as such, partial, at best. As such, Hay argues (2002, 185): ‘we must reject the
behavioural definition of power and redefine the concept in such a way as to separate
out these distinct normative and analytical questions that Dahl, Bachrach and Baratz
and Lukes conflate.’ In attempting this move, Hay distinguishes between ‘context-
shaping’ and ‘conduct-shaping’. Context-shaping refers to the agent’s ability to: ‘have
an effect on the range of possibilities which defines the range of possibilities of
others’ (Hay, 2002, 185). In contrast, conduct shaping involves the direct influence
an individual or group has over an agent.
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Two of us, who are critical realists, agree with Hay that it is important, although
difficult, to separate analytical and normative accounts of power. However, in our
view, this position is not, as Hay suggests, necessarily incompatible with Lukes’
argument. For example, critical realists defend a notion of explanatory critique. This
involves a refutation of Hume’s view that facts cannot entail values and suggests that
we can move from analytical to normative accounts, as long as the move occurs in
that order. In our view, this distinction is important, as it ensures that the Social
Sciences can engage in substantive critique of the socio-political world, but do so in a
manner which is empirically informed (New, 2003).
The key point here is that Hay’s approach is rooted in a constructivist ontological
position, which argues that there is no real/‘objective’ world ‘out there’, which is
independent of our understanding of it. Rather, the world is a social construction. This
means that structures do not exist independently of agents’ construction of them;
rather structures and agents are co-constituted and structures have no independent
causal power. One of us has argued elsewhere (X, 2010) that this approach privileges
agents and ideas, but, here, our point is that, from such a position, the idea that
structures can have an effect on agents of which they are unaware, an argument at the
core of Lukes’ third face of power, is untenable. In contrast, this is the position which
a critical realist would defend and, while we are happy to acknowledge that this
position is contestable, we reject the idea that it is ‘logically unsustainable and
politically offensive.’
More aligned with Hay, a Foucauldian approach would acknowledge the social
construction of reality and the co-constitutive nature of structures and agents. It would
also agree on the impossibility of separating normative from empirical questions.
Indeed, it could argue (somewhat cheekily) that the empirical-normative distinction is
itself a product of power, reflecting an attempt by positivists to insulate themselves
from any interrogation of their own implicit normative assumptions which shape their
understanding of the world (cf. Foucault 1980a: 4). In addition, such an approach
would also maintain that recognising the social construction of the world is merely the
tip of the iceberg; that this recognition obliges us to examine how this construction,
and not another, came to be. It obliges us to examine the conditions of possibility that
enabled it and to explore what are its consequences, in terms of enabling/disabling
particular agents and particular actions. Returning to arguments concerning a
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subject’s ‘real’ interests, this approach avoids claims of ‘false consciousness’ by,
instead, highlighting how these interests came to be – how these interests are
themselves structured by a whole series of power relations that shape what can/cannot
be thought and practiced. In short, it focuses on how context- and conduct-shaping are
very much entwined by examining the construction of preferences, rather than
measuring them up against a set of ‘real’ interests.
Like Hay, both Bourdieu and Foucault, to the extent that they acknowledge the
structure-agency debate, emphasise their co-constitutive nature. However, in doing so,
they acknowledge the limits of such a debate and the need to go further if we want
properly to understand the workings of power. Bourdieu, for example, refers to the
distinction – in his words a distinction between mechanism and finalism – as ‘a false
dilemma’. More specifically, in relation to questions of structure he argues for the
need to ‘abandon all theories which explicitly or implicitly treat practice as a
mechanical reaction’. At the same time, however, he also rejects the view that this
somehow implies a reduction to agency alone: we should not ‘reduce the objective
intentions and constituted significations of actions and works to the conscious and
deliberate intentions of their authors’ (Bourdieu 1977: 72, 73). In short, neither is
adequate.
Importantly, it is in this context that Bourdieu turns to his concepts of habitus and
practice in order to resolve this analytical tension. Rejecting abstract theoretical
categories of ‘structure’ and ‘agency’ and attempts to plot interactions between the
two, he argues that the site of analysis should instead be practice as it occurs within
the confines of habitus. He suggests that practices in habitus are products of a scheme
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immanent to the practice itself – to the particular social field, for example – and not to
independent structures (Bourdieu 1977: 27, 75). Indeed, this structuring of the social
field is better understood as involving a perpetual state of flux, contoured through the
ongoing interaction and struggle between social agents and the social field itself. Put
another way, habitus and the social field are never fully synchronized, which in turn
helps to avoid social determinism. The point to acknowledge then is that practice and
regulation are immanent to each other, rather than being mediated either by external
structures or by individual consciousness; hence the futility of an external, analytical
distinction between structure and agency.
For Foucault, however, this way of thinking about structure and agency involves a
false debate. It is false because power is never exclusively repressive, but also
productive. Biopower is generative of ways of being and behaving; power and agency
therefore are never divorced. Indeed, the focus for Foucault is on how entire
populations are animated so as to act in particular ways. Accordingly, an
understanding of agency cannot be reduced to questions of intentionality, as Giddens
suggests. On the one hand, such a position fails to take into consideration the
generative, positive, dimension of power; and, on the other (Bourdieusian) hand, it
fails adequately to acknowledge the embodied, habitual aspects that shape our actions
and choices; influences that lie beyond intentionality.
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Foucault, the workings of power are never hidden, but immanent to practice. They are
the habits by which we conduct ourselves, the identities we assume and the language
we speak. As such, regulation and practice are immanent to each other, rather than
mediated either by consciousness or by external structures.
Bourdieu’s concept of habitus and its relationship to power has attracted some
attention, most notably in the work of Haugaard (2008), on the relationship between
habitus, power and legitimacy, and by Harrits (2011), on the simultaneous existence
of power as inclusion/empowerment and exclusion/dominance within the practices of
the habitus. In our view, however, our understanding of these issues would be greatly
enhanced if habitus was also considered in relation to Lukes’ third face of power. As
argued by Haugaard (2012), there are ‘obvious affinities’ between Bourdieu’s habitus
and Lukes’ understanding of the three faces of power, yet the precise implications of
habitus for the third face have received little, or no discussion.
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power is played out differently in fields. Fields are the various social and institutional
arenas in which people express and reproduce their dispositions, and where they
compete for the distribution of different kinds of capital. Fields are the site of
struggles for classification, where some forms of capital are deemed to be superior to
others (Tyler, 2013). There are different types of field, for example, the education
field or the media field, and they are the sites of contestation over power. Fields, then,
should be viewed as systems involving dominant and subordinated positions, in which
institutions, individuals or objects derive their distinctive properties from an internal
relationship to all other positions in the field.
People experience power differently depending upon which field they are in at a
particular time. Tensions and contradictions in power relations can arise when people
encounter and are challenged by different contexts, meaning that people can resist
power and domination in one field and accept it in another. So, for example, women
may experience different power relations in the public or private field, where they are
valued in work, but experience subjugation in the home; this can be explained by their
individual and group habitus and the way in which the field is constructed.
Fields, however, can also be the source of hidden power structures or ‘doxa’ of which
people may be unaware and which may limit choices and affect preferences.
According to Bourdieu, in any given field there will be different positions, those that
are the part of the ‘universe of discourse’ and those that are part of the ‘universe of
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the undiscussed’ (1977). The latter includes the notion of doxa, which he defines
through its oppositional relation to opinion. Opinions refer to the existence of beliefs
and values emerging through discourse from a given field. Opinions can involve
orthodox and heterodox positions, with the latter representing the potential to
challenge the more dominant and widely-accepted status of the former. Opinions
emerging from discourse therefore reflect awareness and recognition of the possibility
of different or antagonistic beliefs. Doxa, in contrast, refers to the unstated, taken-for-
granted assumptions or common sense behind the distinctions people make, which can
operate as channels for the transmission of power relations. This includes aspects of
the social world which remain beyond question and are therefore undisputed
(Bourdieu, 1977). A further key aspect of doxa is that it favours practice reproduction,
which exist outside of discourse. As such, while one role of habitus is to equip agents
with a practical sense of how to act in a given social field, a doxic relation between
habitus and field may limit the process of sense-making, by producing what Bourdieu
calls a ‘sense of limits’ (Ellway, 2015).
Field and habitus are integral to each other and the operation of doxa and
misrecognition in the field help us to understand the mechanisms through which
power can become invisible and yet impact on agent’s preferences. In the next
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section, we focus more on the construction of habitus, detailing how its pre-conscious
aspect performs a vital function in this process.
Bourdieu’s concept of habitus has been highly influential at both a theoretical and
empirical level in the Social Sciences, because, through the notion of practice, it helps
us to understand how agents are affected by social structures and how social
structures, in turn, are affected by agents. To put it another way, it proposes a
dialectical, that is an interactive and iterative, relationship between structure and
agency. It also helps us explain how structures can have an influence on agents of
which they are unaware, if we acknowledge its pre-conscious elements.
Whilst the concept of habitus has received much attention in the extant literature,
significantly less attention has been paid to these pre-conscious elements. Here, our
first point is that the pre-conscious is implicit in the operation of habitus, although this
aspect has been neglected by both Bourdieu and his critics (for a development of this
point see X 2012).
Given that Bourdieu does not explicitly state his position on the pre-conscious in his
work, we need to make the pre-conscious aspects of habitus explicit and show how
habitus is reliant on it. Bourdieu’s texts are peppered with references to the
'unconscious' and, more frequently, to how actions are 'not conscious'. As an example,
in Outline of a Theory of Practice, Bourdieu writes:
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The 'unconscious' is never anything other than the forgetting of history
which history itself produces by incorporating the objective structures
it produces in the second natures of habitus... (1977, 78-79).
While the pre-conscious is implicated in how habitus functions, other critics have
argued that the pre-conscious elements of habitus reduce conscious actions (Elder-
Vass 2007; King 2000; Jenkins 2002). The issue for Jenkins (2002) and Elder-Vass
(2007) is that the pre-conscious leads to a reduction in conscious thought in
Bourdieu's theory. We do not have the space to address this issue now, but, following
McNay, we would argue that Bourdieu does not reject reflexivity in agency, rather he
acknowledges the difficulty of reflexivity (McNay, 1999; Adkins, 2003; Adams,
2006; Sweetman, 2003). The key point here is that reflexivity occurs within habitus
and not from outside it, so it is not based on an 'objectivist reflexivity', where agents
can stand outside of their habitus to be reflexive, rather reflexivity is understood as
'situated reflexivity' (Adkins: 2003: 25). However, our main point here is that
Bourdieu, his admirers and his critics all seem to have accepted the existence of a pre-
conscious element to habitus, although it receives very little attention in the literature.
This may be partly explained by Bourdieu’s reluctance to engage with what he saw as
psychoanalytical or psychological concepts, which he considered to be outside of his
domain (Grenfell, 2012).
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influences agency and, in turn, is reproduced in society as a social structure. The pre-
conscious is not conceptualised as a container for negative influences on agency, but
should be understood as a broader category of agency, which is neither positive nor
negative, but reflects influences on agency which the agent may not necessarily filter
through her more conscious capacities. This does not mean that agents are non-
reflexive,1 although some may be. Rather, what we are arguing is that agents are not
always reflexive, but, instead, often act habitually, in a non-reflexive, pre-conscious,
way.2 In doing so, we are critiquing the recent tendency to elide agency and
reflexivity, arguing that reflexivity is but one aspect on a spectrum of agential
characteristics. In our view, this is how the habitus works (for more on this point see
X and Y, 2015). Agents have values/orientations on which they do not reflect; so,
these values are pre-conscious. One more issue is important here, following Lukes,
we would suggest that sometimes/often these values reflect the structural ‘interests’ of
the powerful in society, and that, if we adopt a critical realist methodology, we can
examine those relationships, which are, from that perspective, the products of deep,
not directly observably, structures.
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shapes her preferences.
For Foucault power is not grounded in the state or in relations of production. It isn’t
an attribute which is possessed and used instrumentally by agents, as it is in the
mainstream understanding associated with Lukes’ first and second face. Rather,
power in this setting is ‘defaced’, insofar as its operation cannot be reduced to the
actions of particular agents, but, rather, permeates the social field (Hayward 1998,
2000). It is diffused throughout society, operating on and through both institutions and
the bodies of agents. Consequently, his understanding of power extends beyond
decision-making processes to encompass structures of thinking and behaving that
were previously understood as devoid of power relations. In this way, Foucault, like
Bourdieu through his notion of habitus, recognises that the effects of power are quite
material insofar as its site is more often than not the body itself.
Again like Bourdieu, Foucault also maintains that individual preferences are shaped in
relation to the social field. For Foucault, power pervades the shaping of preferences,
because, beneath intentional beliefs and practices, lie deeper, socially-reproduced,
norms that serve as a background condition to make possible the formation of
interests and activities (Digeser 1992:981-982). Indeed, preferences are informed by
the historic construction of norms about what are considered appropriate ways of
being and behaving in that social field. For example, in a study of the marginalisation
of African-American workers, Hayward (1998) shows how the preferences and
agency of the workers is embedded within an earlier set of economic decisions and an
historical legacy of discrimination. Here, power is not an instrument that agents use to
prevent the powerless from acting freely, but rather acts as social boundaries that
define the field of thinking and acting for all actors. Put simply, it acts ‘upon the
boundaries that constrain and enable social action’ (Hayward 1998: 12). Accordingly,
research on the formation of preferences does not focus on uncovering the subject’s
‘real’ interests, but rather on the sources and effects of these norms or background
conditions, irrespective of their ‘authenticity’.
Importantly, however, this view of power does not eliminate the subject, or a concern
with agency. Indeed, contrary to the criticism by Giddens (1984: 157) that Foucault
and his followers are merely structuralists, who overlook questions of agency,
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Foucault’s focus is on the very construction of the subject. More precisely, rather than
taking the subject, be it an individual, a class or a nation, as a given, and thereby
ignoring how it came to be, the focus is on the process of subjectification. As such, it
is crucial to interrogate the processes through which subjects and their preferences are
constructed, understanding this construction in reference to a collection of ‘techniques
of power’ that pervade society. Put simply, the Foucauldian approach focuses on how
the subject is constituted through power, how power operates on and through the
bodies of subjects. Here, agency is exhibited always in relation to structure, or,
expressed in terms more aligned with the analysis to follow, subjects internalise
numerous restraints (Johal, Moran & Williams 2014: 401). Consequently, an analysis
cannot begin with an already-given, autonomous, subject who precedes the operation
of power, as in positivist, phenomenological or other approaches, but requires an
interpretivist approach that is able to interrogate the rules which govern the various
social practices that produce subjects and their preferences.
This approach is potentially important for discussions of the third face of power
insofar as Foucault specifically examines how mechanisms of power are concerned
with the reproduction of preferences that ensure the management and administration
of social life. Like Bourdieu, he maintains that the reproduction of social norms lies
beyond the state itself, as it encompasses: ‘a tightly knit grid of material coercions
rather than the physical existence of a sovereign’ (Foucault 1980b: 104). Indeed,
power relations are simultaneously local, unstable and diffuse, and thus do not
emanate from a central point (Deleuze 1988: 73). As such, power is not conceived
exclusively in a negative fashion, as excluding, repressing, censoring, abstracting,
masking and/or concealing, but also as positive and enabling, as producing domains
of truth and appropriate ways of behaving (Foucault 1995: 194). For a Foucauldian,
power thus works to incite, reinforce, control, monitor, optimise and organise. In
short, it is generative, making subjects grow and ordering them, rather than dedicated
to impeding them, making them submit or destroying them (Foucault 1978: 133). It is
in this context that the generation of the subject and her preferences involves a
multiplicity of interrelated factors.
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Foucault’s later work, particularly the History of Sexuality (1978) and his lectures at
the Collège de France in the late 1970s, with its interpretation by colleague and one-
time friend Gilles Deleuze, specifically, but not exclusively, in Foucault (1988). At its
most basic, the social unconscious concerns the inter-relationship between the social
field and the unconscious. This is important for our purposes, to the extent that the
individual unconscious, or in their words psyche, is composed of the same kind of
material as society, bodies, relations, productions and events. Given that it is produced
in the same way as society, the psyche has no primacy, nor claim to originality, in
relation to the construction of preferences. To this extent, the unconscious is not some
separate, autonomous entity; a latent source of energy that is uniquely individual and,
therefore, pushes and pulls us in a distinctive manner. Rather, it too is constructed by,
and therefore invests in, the social field, with our preferences thus continually
reproduced in relation to this social field. Put another way, our preferences cannot be
reduced to subjective intention alone, but are shaped by social, and highly political,
forces, whether we are mindful of them or not.
As such, interaction with the social field is central to the construction of the
unconscious and the preferences therein. Here, the psyche is produced in such a
manner that a small portion of the social field is internalised within the subject. For
example, it is internalised as the memories we have of how to act in such a situation,
or as the habits we form in our everyday interaction with the world. Put alternatively,
and in relations to the work of Deleuze, the psyche is formed through a process of
folding, of taking external social elements and internalising them as one’s own, again
whether we are mindful of it or not. Indeed, for Deleuze (1988: 97) it was through
such an approach that Foucault discovered a way of ‘folding the line of the outside’,
whereby the outside is ‘interiorised’.
What this means for the construction of social norms, and later the elaboration of
preferences, is that they are continually produced/reproduced through how we
conduct ourselves in the world. That is, if the inside (the psyche) is constituted
through a folding of the outside (the social field), then the relation to oneself – how I
think and how I conduct myself – is similar to relations already apparent in the social
field. Relations to oneself become ‘a principle of internal regulation’, formulated in a
manner consistent with the power dynamics of family, race, class and gender apparent
in the social field (Deleuze 1988: 100). To put it crudely, I come to identity myself in
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the same way as I am stratified in the social field. I continuingly modulate myself
within this normative band of what is, and is not, recognised as a legitimate way of
being and behaving (Rose 1996; Miller and Rose 2008).
Translated more directly into discussion of the third face of power, the claim is that,
as well as comporting herself in accordance with a series of social norms, the subject
also conjugates within herself socially-produced preferences (Deleuze and Guattari
1987: 85-6). The synthesis between the unconscious and the social field is thus no
free-for-all, poly-vocal, process of multiple transitions, but a stratifying process. We
come to evaluate ourselves in relation to a series of boundaries between particular
terms that impose order upon our world and through which we reproduce this social
formation in how we talk and act. Accordingly, and this is the key point, it is through
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how we talk and act that it is possible to chart this stratifying process and thus access
the implicit assumptions that shape our preferences. The focus, therefore, does not
centre on the psyche itself, but on visible, exterior, relations, like the conjunction
between multiple power relations and the subject’s identification with these
conjunctions. Put another way, rather than tunnelling into the pre-conscious, a
Foucauldian approach operates in practice on the surface of thought: on what is said
and on what is put into action. We are thus able to explore the third face of power by
charting a subject’s language and behaviour.
We have argued that one can defend Lukes’ idea of a third face of power using either
a Bourdieusian or a Foucauldian perspective. Here, we briefly discuss the similarities
and differences between these approaches. In so doing we not only respond to Hay’s
critique of Lukes, but also detail how both perspectives can help chart the
construction of preferences.
If we focus first on what they share, here there is clearly methodological agreement.
Both see the first task as isolating the operation of power within a population, a
discipline or a particular social field, but, at the same time, see such a particular
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operation of power as reflecting the workings of power in society at large. Foucault,
for example, explores the dynamics proper to a technology of power, charting the
historical production of discourses on madness, so as to tell a larger story about
Western civilization. Similarly, Bourdieu isolates communities – in Algeria, for
example – or particular social fields – the educational field, the artistic field, the
commercial field – through which a picture emerges of broader contemporary society.
The unit of analysis – be it a particular discourse, Kabylia, or a social field – is itself
generative of the theory. For Foucault, the procedures and details of clinical control
become micro-apparatuses or technologies of power through which to understand
power in the contemporary setting. For Bourdieu, the strategies, the private
experiences and/or that which is socially inscribed on the body as habitus, are all
utilized to explain the reproduction of social order more broadly. Both Foucault and
Bourdieu then are interested in the construction and consequences of power and how
it is continually articulated through the subject.
Despite this same starting point, however, Foucault’s understanding of this issue is
different to Bourdieu’s because of his relational view of power, where power is a
function of a network of relations between subjects. Power has no central focus here
and cannot be exercised by particular agents or institutions. Rather, power operates
through impersonal mechanisms of bodily discipline that often escape the
consciousness of the subject. Accordingly, power is irreducible to subjects who
exercise it over others with the sanction of ‘right’ or law. This is not to suggest that
the ubiquity of power means that it flows equally among social agents. On the
contrary, in the panoptical setting of Foucault’s earlier work, the subject of
surveillance does not have the reciprocal power to observe the observer. Similarly, in
the bio-political setting of his later work, we see how the individual’s deviance is
investigated, with power asymmetrically in favour of the person(s) whose access to
privileged forms of knowledge grants them the authority to pass judgement.
Accordingly, it is difficult to identify a priori any determinate social location in which
power is exercised or resisted. Rather, such a move depends on an historical
(genealogical) analysis of madness, the clinic or sexuality, so as to chart the formation
and consequences of power on and through the subject.
At first glance, it might be suggested that Bourdieu also offers a relational view of
power, because, for him also, power is dispersed amongst the social body. However,
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for Bourdieu, power is linked to resources (capital) and power can be possessed by
agents, thus identifying agents, and their habituses, as a site of analysis. As such,
Bourdieu’s theory of practice as the symbolically mediated interaction between
habitus and social structure avoids these problems by connecting relations of
domination both to identifiable social agents and to the institutions of the state.
Accordingly, Bourdieu seems to offer a more empirically sensitive analytical
framework for decoding impersonal operations of power than does Foucault. It thus
potentially provides a more immediate framework to examine individual agency and
preferences, while for Foucault it is a question of deeper historical investigation into
the construction of both the subject and her preferences.
In Conclusion
The core claims of this article are: first, that any full conceptualisation of power needs
to move beyond a focus on just the first and second faces; second, that in
conceptualising the third face we need to recognise that agents can be influenced by
structures and/or ideas in ways of which they are unaware; and, third, that both
Bourdieu and Foucault, in related, but different, ways, offer fruitful ways forward in
exploring that third face. Crucially, they share an understanding that agents’
preferences are shaped by processes of which they are not necessarily aware; what we
have termed a pre-conscious, or a social unconscious, dimension As such, they offer
us a more nuanced way of dealing with the subtleties of the third face. Utilising
Bourdieu’s work, the core of any understanding of the ‘third face’ would involve an
appreciation of the relationship between the social field and the habitus, while for
Foucault the focus is upon the construction of the subject and her preferences in
relation to the ongoing production of power.
However, we need also to recognise the major difference between Bourdieu and
Foucault’s approaches. For Foucault, power has no central focus; it is inscribed in
institutions, processes, practices and people. As such, it is not exercised by particular
agents or institutions. In contrast, for Bourdieu, power is linked to resources, to
‘forms of capital’. Different agents possess different mixes of resources and those
with more resources are likely to exercise power over those with less.
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Of course, throughout this article we have side-stepped a crucial aspect of the faces of
power debate; the methodological issues involved in studying the third face of power.
We are not underplaying these problems, but our argument is that we need to be clear
about how we are conceptualising the third face of power before we move to
examining it empirically.
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