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