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                132   Chapter 6 Structuralism and post-structuralism

                          ...[T]he inmates ...[are] caught up in a power situation of which they are them-
                          selves the bearers. . . . He who is subjected to a field of visibility, and who knows
                          it, assumes responsibility for the constraints of power; he makes them play spon-
                          taneously upon himself; he inscribes in himself the power relation in which he
                          simultaneously plays both roles; he becomes the principle of his own subjection
                          (201, 202–3).

                      In other words, inmates do not know whether or not they are actually being watched.
                      Therefore, they learn to behave as if they are always being watched. This is the power
                      of the panopticon. Panopticism is the extension of this system of surveillance to soci-
                      ety as a whole.
                         According  to  Foucault,  Bentham’s  panopticon  is,  therefore,  profoundly  sym-
                      ptomatic  of  a  historical  shift,  from  the  eighteenth  century  onwards,  in  methods  of
                      social control. This is a movement from punishment (enforcing norms of behaviour
                      through spectacular displays of power: public hangings and torture, etc.) to discipline
                      (enforcing norms of behaviour through surveillance); a shift from ‘exceptional discip-
                      line to one of generalised surveillance . . . the formation of what might be called in
                      general the disciplinary society’ (209). As he explains, the panopticon is ‘a generaliz-
                      able model [for] . . . defining power relations in terms of the everyday life. ...[I]t is a
                      diagram of a mechanism of power reduced to its ideal form’ (205). The movement
                      from spectacle to surveillance turns ‘the whole social body into a field of perception’
                      (214). The intersecting gazes of power criss-cross the social body, drawing more and
                      more aspects of human existence into its field of vision. But it is not simply that power
                      catches  us  in  its  gaze,  rather  power  works  when  we  recognize  its  gaze.  As  Foucault
                      makes clear, using a theatre metaphor, ‘We are neither in the amphitheatre, nor on the
                      stage, but in the panoptic machine, invested by its effects of power, which we bring to
                      ourselves  since  we  are  part  of  the  mechanism’  (217).  In  this  way,  then,  he  argues,
                      surveillance has become the dominant mode of the operation of power. ‘Panopticism
                      is a form of power . . . organised around the norm, in terms of what [is] normal or not,
                      correct or not, in terms of what one must do or not do’ (2002c, 58–9). It is a funda-
                      mental aspect of what he calls ‘normalisation’ (79).
                         An obvious confirmation of his claim is the widespread use of surveillance tech-
                      nologies in contemporary society. For example, a survey conducted in 2002 estimated
                      that  there  are  around  4.2  million  CCTV  cameras  in  the  United  Kingdom;  roughly
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                      equivalent to one camera for every fourteen people. This stands in direct relation to
                      Bentham’s  panopticon.  But  the  discipline  of  surveillance  has  also  had  a  profound
                      influence  on  popular  culture.  I  can  think  of  at  least  four  examples  of  surveillance
                      media.  Perhaps  the  most  obvious  examples  are  television  programmes  such  as  Big
                      Brother and I’m a Celebrity, Get me Out of Here, in which surveillance is a fundamental
                      aspect of how these programmes work. In many ways Big Brother is panopticon televi-
                      sion in its most visible form. Undoubtedly, part of its appeal is that it appears to enable
                      us to assume the role of Bentham’s imaginary inspector, as we take pleasure in the
                      ability to observe without being observed, to be involved without being involved, and
                      to judge without being judged. However, in the light of Foucault’s point about the
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