Foucault-Security, Territory

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Across
  1. 1. The 18th-century city used as an example of security technology in urban planning, focusing on managing circulation and future growth.
  2. 4. Foucault uses the historical exclusion of people with this disease as an example of a binary, juridico-religious power division.
  3. 6. Foucault's term for the set of mechanisms by which the human species' biological features became a political strategy.
  4. 8. The space of security, where uncertain elements unfold and circulation of causes and effects is managed, combining natural and artificial givens.
  5. 10. A multiplicity of individuals existing biologically within their material surroundings, serving as both object and subject of security mechanisms.
Down
  1. 2. The apparatus of power that calculates costs and probabilities, operating within optimal averages rather than strict prohibitions.
  2. 3. The type of theoretical discourse that Foucault categorically advises against engaging in.
  3. 5. A mechanism of power characterized by surveillance, correction, and the structuring of individuals within closed, artificial spaces.
  4. 7. This historical epidemic's regulations, involving strict partitioning and home inspections, are an example of a disciplinary system.
  5. 9. A 17th-century town, built from scratch in the form of a Roman camp, serving as Foucault's example of a disciplinary space.