What Can Be Said: Foucault and the Silent Architecture of Discourse
Aim and thesis The article will argue that, in L’ordre du discours , Foucault does not merely describe censorship or repression but uncovers a prior and more decisive level of control: the set of procedures that determine what can enter discourse at all. These mechanisms operate across institutions, disciplines, and cultural practices, and remain highly operative in contemporary society. Introduction: The Illusion of Free Speech Modern societies often present themselves as arenas of open debate, where ideas circulate freely and disagreement is resolved through argument rather than exclusion. Speech appears, at least in principle, unrestricted. Against this reassuring image, Michel Foucault advances a far more unsettling claim. In his 1970 inaugural lecture at the Collège de France, later published as L’ordre du discours ( The Order of Discourse ), he insists that discourse is never simply free. Long before ideas are exchanged or contested, societies establish procedures that det...