Yet, the domination that "one person exercises over others, or one group over another," which typically animates discussions of sovereignty, is not what concerned Foucault (1980, p. 95). Instead, it is the "manifold forms of domination" that emerge "among subjects in their mutual relations" (p. 95). Foucault's project, then, centered on substituting the "problem of domination and subjugation for that of sovereignty and obedience." And this project required moving beyond the traditional conceptualization of politics.