Michel Foucault’s theory of power remains one of the most influential frameworks for understanding disciplinary mechanisms, surveillance structures, and the formation of subjectivity. However, his model conceptualizes power primarily as a fixative and normalizing force: a network that shapes individuals through regulation and surveillance. While this framework successfully exposes the mechanisms of modern institutions, it lacks an account of collapse and regeneration. This paper proposes an extension to Foucault’s theory based on “Tension Theory,” a model that conceptualizes social structures as dynamic systems driven by fluctuating tension gradients, cycles of pressure accumulation, structural rupture, and subsequent reformation. By integrating Tension Theory with Foucault’s power analysis, this study introduces a dynamic, cyclical understanding of power: from fixation to breakdown to emergent re-organization. This dynamic model clarifies phenomena that Foucault’s framework cannot fully explain—revolutions, cultural shifts, spontaneous creativity, and the reconstitution of subjectivity beyond disciplinary systems. The paper concludes that the integration of tension-based dynamics expands Foucault’s static model into a theory capable of describing real-world socio-structural change.
Akimoto Hitoshi (Tue,) studied this question.