4. Conclusion
Foucault’s geography proves to be a powerful methodological instrument that leads us to a more precise determination of the boundaries of modernity in geography, which are determined by understanding and defining the essential disciplinary subject of study - space. Foucault’s departure from the Hegelian approach to interpreting space as ”dead, fixed, non-dialectical, and immovable” enabled what Lefebvre would call the production of space (relational space), which Harvey and Soja would translate into the world of geography. Also, Foucault’s genealogical analysis becomes challenging only today and very demanding. In the time of ”fasting truth” and fluid understanding of justice, it leads us to search for that discontinuity and hidden truths.