KCL talk, Boris and a mechanical elephant

The talk at King’s College London seemed to go down quite well. Lunchtime talks can be a bit rushed but there was a really good turnout and some good questions. Nice lunch with some very good MA students afterwards. Thanks to Richard Schofield for the invitation.

Then went to the opening of Exhibition Road. I had a media invite to this (not sure why – this blog?), and since I was actually staying in Kensington, it seemed worth doing. Boris Johnson was doing his standard Boris act – it is an act, the bumbling fool thing, because he’s clearly very smart – there was the band of Welsh guards, and a mechanical elephant. Not sure quite why, and rather disappointingly it was driven – it didn’t walk. (I think I was expecting something like out of the beginning of The Empire Strikes Back.) For those that don’t know, Exhibition Road runs past the Natural History, Science and Victoria & Albert Museums, and links South Kensington with Hyde Park. The Royal Geographical Society is at the north end. It’s been completely resurfaced, and a lot of the buildings have had their facades redone. It’s not pedestrianised, but the idea is that cars are limited to 20 mph and it is a more open public space.

Then met up with an old friend for dinner and a movie – The Descendents. It was good, although difficult not to think it was George Clooney reacting to the events of the movie, rather than George Clooney acting as somebody to whom the events are happening…

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Agamben – Homo Sacer structure

Thanks to Nicholas Dahmann for this – the structure of Agamben’s Homo Sacer in graphic form… jpg and pdf.

Posted in Giorgio Agamben | 8 Comments

Analysing Discourse conference in Stockholm

14-15 June 2012. Details here and here.

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Map fight

This is handy comparison tool for sizes of different countries. I was looking for a rough indicator for the size of Somalia for a lecture, and it’s almost exactly the same size as France.

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Thrift on refereeing in crisis

In the Chronicle of Higher Education. Thanks to Sam Kinsey for posting this in comments – I’ve reposted so it is more widely seen.

Posted in Nigel Thrift, Publishing | 2 Comments

Giorgio Agamben – Homo Sacer structure

Thanks to André Dias for the Italian information - this is the structure of Giorgio Agamben’s Homo Sacer series, with English titles where available:

I:  Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life [Homo Sacer: Il potere soverano e la vita nuda, Einaudi, Torino, 1995]
II, 1: State of Exception [Stato di Eccezione, Bollati Borighieri, Torino, 2003]
II, 2: The Kingdom and the Glory: For a Theological Genealogy of Economy and Government [Il Regno e la Gloria. Per una genealogia teologica dell’economia e del governo, Neri Pozza, Vicenza, 2007]
II, 3: The Sacrament of Language: An Archaeology of the Oath [Il sacramento del linguaggio: Archeologia del giuramento, Laterza, Bari, 2008]
II, 5: Opus Dei. Archeologia dell’ufficio, Bollati Boringhieri, Torino, 2012
III: Remnants of Auschwitz: The Witness and the Archive [Quel che resta di Auschwitz. L’archivio e il testimone, Bollati Boringhieri, Torino, 1998]
IV, 1: Altissima povertà. Regole monastiche e forma di vita, Neri Pozza, Vicenza, 2011.

Anything wrong or missing? Please let me know.

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King’s College London talk

Wednesday 1st February, 12 noon, “How should we do the history of territory?” Pyramid Room, Geography Department, King’s College London, 4th floor King’s Building.

 

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On peer review

A post on the difficulty of getting reports, here; and a post on how it’s not really a huge amount of work, with interesting comments, here. Another post raises the issue of who is asked to referee. And finally, a proposal to abolish it altogether.

I’m unconvinced by the last. Yes, peer review has its problems, not least the generalised unwillingness of people to do it, often by the same people who are creating the need for it, i.e. authors. I’ve written about this in an editorial before, and recently wrote a short piece for the Society and Space open site about referees, following a piece by Felix Driver in Journal of Historical Geography. I sense that this will run and run, but here’s a paragraph from the Society and Space open site piece:

It is easy to be critical of reviewers, and there are, of course, bad reports and bad referees. Getting reports on a paper, getting those reports on time, and good reports, is one of the biggest challenges for journal editors and managers. But the idea is one that is difficult to envision being abandoned. It is increasingly fashionable to complain about the review, production and editing process of journals, and to praise open access publishing and blogs as means of disseminating information. While there can be very good editorial standards in open access journals – in related fields, see, for example Surveillance and Society and Acme: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies – these are never ‘free’. They exist on the good will of editors, voluntary labour from others, and of course, on referees. If you think that the refereeing, editorial and publisher production process adds little, consider a journal that includes the next ten papers submitted to it, inappropriate or not, rough and ready, unedited and simply in the form they arrive, and compare that to the finished next issue of that journal. I can guarantee you are more likely to read the latter. Refereeing is an essential part of that process.

I wonder if there is something else the status getting into a peer-reviewed journal means – exposure for earlier career researchers. If everything was up on personal sites, or general, unreviewed depositories, then perhaps established people would have readers. But how would you tell whose personal site was worth reading; and in the general site among the huge amounts, why would you read X when you can read Y, perhaps on the same subject? You may have read a less good piece, but how would you know unless you read everything? I think that anything in Society and Space, regardless of author, is worth reading. And in terms of having different modes of review concerning material uploaded, it looks like it would be re-inventing the wheel: “other scholars (perhaps a pre-selected board?)”… “journal editors pick papers”… “what would a referee’s motivation be?”… “what if sites allowed qualified professionals to submit brief comments”…

The one thing that is compelling is the question of why review things twice. I’ve thought the same thing as I review tenure files for the US, write evaluation letters on published scholarship, not to mention the British research assessment exercise…

Posted in Publishing, Society and Space | 2 Comments

Agamben, Opus Dei in French

Agamben’s Opus Dei – volume II, 5 of the Homo Sacer project – has been translated into French. Why is it the French seem to always be quicker at translations than the English or American presses? I can’t find an English translation listed anywhere. It was the same with The Kingdom and the Glory, which I read in French a couple of years before the English version was published.

Does anyone know of a site that lists the order and plan for the Homo Sacer series?

There are a lot of videos of Agamben talking about this project and much else, here.

Posted in Giorgio Agamben | 4 Comments

Canguilhem, Complete Works

Volume 1 of Georges Canguilhem’s Œuvres complètes was published late last year. Given it is over 1,000 pages, the price of €38 is not too steep. There are projected to be six volumes. This has been promised for some time.

Canguilhem is perhaps best known today through the Foucault link, but he is a very interesting philosopher and historian of medicine and the life sciences.

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