Contents: Introduction: Space, knowledge and power: Foucault and geography, Stuart Elden and Jeremy W. Crampton. Part 1 Questions: Some questions from Michel Foucault to Hérodote, Michel Foucault (translated by Stuart Elden). Part 2 Francophone Responses – 1977: Hérodote editorial, translated by Gerald Moore; Response: Jean-Michel Brabant (translated by Gerald Moore); Response: Alain Joxe (translated by Gerald Moore); Response:Jean-Bernard Racine and Claude Raffestin (translated by Gerald Moore); Response: Michel Riou (translated by Gerald Moore). Part 3 Anglophone Responses – 2006: The Kantian roots of Foucault's dilemmas, David Harvey; Geography, gender and power, Sara Mills; Overcome by space: reworking Foucault, Nigel Thrift; Foucault among the geographers, Thomas Flynn. Part 4 Contexts: Strategy, medicine and habitat: Foucault in 1976, Stuart Elden; Formations of 'Foucault' in Anglo-American geography: an archaeological sketch, Matthew Hannah; Catalysts and converts: sparking interest for Foucault among Francophone geographers, Juliet J. Fall; Could Foucault have revolutionized geography?, Claude Raffestin (translated by Gerald Moore). Part 5 Texts: The incorporation of the hospital into modern technology, Michel Foucault (translated by Edgar Knowlton Jr., William J. King, and Stuart Elden); The meshes of power, Michel Foucault (translated by Gerald Moore); The language of space, Michel Foucault (translated by Gerald Moore); The force of flight, Michel Foucault (translated by Gerald Moore); Questions on geography, Michel Foucault (translated by Colin Gordon). Part 6 Development: Geographies of governmentality, Margo Huxley; The history of medical geography after Foucault, Gerry Kearns; Maps, race and Foucault: eugenics and territorialization following World War I, Jeremy W. Crampton; Beyond the Panopticon? Foucault and surveillance studies, David Murakami Wood; Beyond the European province: Foucault and postcolonialism, Stephen Legg; Foucault, sexuality, geography, Philip Howell; The problem with Empire, Mathew Coleman and John A. Agnew; 'Bellicose history' and 'local discursivities': an archaeological reading of Michel Foucault's Society Must be Defended, Chris Philo. Index.