Georges Bataille, Roger Caillois and the Question of Fascism

Most of Georges Bataille’s earliest writings were literary, and between 1929 and the early 1930s he was the editor of Documents, an art and literary journal (scans are available on Gallica). Most of his articles there were included in the first volume of his Œuvres complètes, and several were included in the Encyclopædia Acephalica. (An attempt at a comprehensive listing of English translations of his work is here.)

In the early 1930s he wrote increasingly political texts, including “The Psychological Structure of Fascism”, which was published in La Critique sociale in two parts in late 1933 and early 1934 (included in Œuvres completes Vol I, 339-71, as a short book with Éditions Lignes in 2009, and translated in Visions of Excess, 137-60). A crucial moment for Bataille seems to have been the Veterans’ Riot of 6 February 1934, when the police and right-wing groups clashed in Paris, and the leftist protests which followed the next week. This context is usefully discussed by Susan Rubin Suleiman in “Bataille in the Street” and Chapter 1 of Dudley Andrew and Steven Ungar’s Popular Front Paris and the Poetics of Culture. Bataille’s editor Denis Hollier reports in the wake of these events that “Bataille planned to write a book titled Le fascisme en France” (Absent without Leave, 60). This was never completed, but the surviving notes for this project were published in the posthumous Œuvres complètes (Vol II, 205-13, 214-21; untranslated).

Cover of a reedition of Bataille’s essay

In the mid-1930s Bataille combined these different interests in at least three groups. One was the Collège de Sociologie. The Collège was a loose grouping of intellectuals, founded by Bataille with Roger Caillois and Michel Leiris. Walter Benjamin, by this time in exile in Paris, regularly attended the Collège’s meetings, but never spoke there. A session was planned, but the war ended the Collège’s work. Famously, Benjamin gave Bataille several manuscripts for safekeeping in the Bibliothèque nationale before he fled Paris in June 1940.

The texts of the Collège were collected by Hollier in a French text, an expanded English translation, and a later revised French text (Le Collège de Sociologie/The College of Sociology). Each contains material not in the previous edition. There are some good studies of the Collège in relation to wider developments in French sociology, including by Michèle H. Richman, Simonetta Falasca-Zamponi and Stephan Moebius.

While the Collège was the public-facing front of Bataille and his colleagues’ work, at the same time he was editing the short-lived journal Acéphale, mostly written by him and whose contributors included Caillois, Pierre Klossowski and Jean Wahl. A reproduction of the journal’s five issues (issue 3-4 was a double volume) was published in 1980, but that’s almost as hard to find as the original. Scans are available online at Monoskop. The declaration of the Collège first appeared in the pages of Acéphale in 1937 (Œuvres complètes, Vol I, 491-92; The College of Sociology, 5), as did an important piece defending Friedrich Nietzsche from the fascist interpretation (Œuvres complètes, Vol I, 447-65; Visions of Excess, 182-96). This piece anticipated the arguments of Bataille’s pre-war book on Nietzsche. There was also a parallel secret society of the same name as the journal. The secret society remained largely unknown until some recent work which has brought it better to light. These include the Encyclopædia Acephalicaedited by Alastair Brotchie and The Sacred Conspiracy: The Internal Papers of the Secret Society of Acéphale and Lectures to the College of Sociology, edited by Marina Galletti and Brochie. One notorious story is that the group planned a human sacrifice, but while they had volunteers to be the victim, no-one was willing to wield the knife.

Bataille was also part of the anti-fascist Contre-Attaque group, along with André Breton and Caillois. Some Contre-Attaque publications were collected in the first volume of Bataille’s Œuvres complètes, but a more comprehensive collection of Bataille and Breton’s work, and other documents was published in 2013. Benjamin met with the group shortly before its dissolution, in January 1936, having been introduced by Klossowski. (The “Chronology” included in each volume of Benjamin’s Selected Writings is helpful on his Paris connections; so too is Paul Foss-Heimlich’s postscript to Klossowski, Living Currency). 

Cover of the ‘Contre-Attaque’ collection

Despite Bataille’s writings on fascism, and the aim of Contre-Attaque, this has not stopped criticism for an ambiguous attitude, particularly in relation to the group’s interest in fascist symbols. Klossowski, for example, describes the “muted, equivocal attraction [l’attirance sourde, equivoque]” of fascism for Bataille, despite despising fascists themselves (interview in Jean-Maurice Monnoyer, Le Peintre et son démon, 189). Klossowski discusses this question in Un si funeste désir/Such a Deathly Desire, Chapter 5. Benjamin also apparently suggested that Bataille’s articles, particularly “The Notion of Expenditure”, “were working to the advantage of fascism!” That may well be true, but in trying to find the source, the references lead back to an article by Giorgio Agamben (“Bataille e il paradosso della sovranità”, 115; “Bataille and the Paradox of Sovereignty”, 249) in which he reports Klossowski’s recollection of this, many years after the event. Agamben reports Klossowski recalled Benjamin said is not the most direct of sources (see Hollier, Absent without Leave, 207 n. 3).

Alexandre Kojève had also criticised Bataille and Caillois for wanting to be sorcerer’s apprentices, initiating a sense of the Sacred which would return to inflame them. He was critical of this move: “a thaumaturge, for his part, could no more be carried away by a sacred knowingly activated by himself, than could a conjurer [prestidigitateur] be persuaded of the existence of magic while marvelling at his own sleight of hand”. Caillois reports this in some much later texts (Approches de I’imaginaire, 59; Gilles Lapouge, “Entretien avec Roger Caillois”). It has been discussed by, for example, Hollier (The College of Sociology, 12-13) and Patrick ffrench (After Bataille, 18-19). This accusation was the spur to Bataille appropriating the term “Sorcerer’s Apprentice” for an essay. That piece was one of four texts the Collège published in the Nouvelle Revue française in July 1938, which had an Introduction by Caillois, his text “The Winter Wind”, and Leiris’s “The Sacred in Everyday Life” (reprinted in Le Collège de Sociologie, 94-118, 302-53; The College of Sociology, 7-42).

Bataille’s biographer Michel Surya takes a strong interpretative line on Bataille’s anti-fascism, indicating the pieces he wrote, and the claims within them. His account is in part a defence of Bataille against Klossowski’s charge. One key text he indicates is the Collège’s declaration on the Munich Crisis, dated 7 October 1938, published at the start of November, and signed by Bataille, Caillois and Leiris (Le Collège de Sociologie, 355-63; The College of Sociology, 43-46). For Surya: “The clarity of this declaration, its forcefulness… cut through any charge of equivocation” (Georges Bataille, 309-10/267). Any ambiguities in the text are, for Surya, superficial, and he contends that Bataille was “one of the most peremptory antifascists as early as 1933” (Surya, Georges Bataille: La mort à l’œuvre, 273 n. 23; reworked in the later edition 309-10/267-68; see Hollier, Absent without Leave, 206 n. 3). Hollier broadly follows Surya’s line about Bataille’s anti-fascism, discussing the Collège and accusations of “ideological ambiguity” (Absent without Leave, Ch. 6, the quote is on 76). He, however, adds some qualifications to this account. He stresses that it was Caillois, not Bataille, who wrote the declaration on the Munich crisis, as shown by their correspondence (Bataille to Caillois, 10 November 1938). 

Maurice Blanchot first met Bataille in December 1940, and reports that Bataille came to have some doubts about “The Psychological Structure of Fascism”, because it “might lend itself to more than one reading”. Nonetheless Blanchot is certain that Bataille in 1940 was horrified by Nazism, the Philippe Pétain-led Vichy regime and its ideology (Les Intellectuels en question, p. 41 n. 7; The Blanchot Reader, p. 226 n. 8).

However, as I have discussed in an earlier piece in this seriesMaurice Blanchot’s Politics and His War-Time Reviews of Georges Dumézil, Blanchot’s own political position in this period have long been questioned. In his accusations against Dumézil, Carlo Ginzburg also draws links between his politics and those of the Collège, though not the connection to Blanchot. I’ve discussed those criticisms and the responses by Dumézil and Didier Eribon in the introduction to the recent re-edition of Dumézil’s Mitra-Varuna (open access), and will return to them in future work. For now, the point is about how Ginzburg associates Dumézil with the work of the Collège and his more general criticisms of Bataille and Caillois. In a more recent piece included in his Secularism and its Ambiguities, Ginzburg claims that Bataille and Breton’s counter-attack rather than defence risked “a slippage, from competing with fascism on the same ground to echoing or imitating fascism” (61). 

Frank Pierce suggests that Dumézil attended Collège meetings (2), but he provides (and I have found) no evidence of this. It is certainly not impossible, since Caillois was a student of Dumézil in the 1930s, and became a lifelong friend. Dumézil says Bataille attended some of his seminars at the École Pratique des Hautes Études, which is also possible – as well as the connection through Caillois, Bataille certainly attended classes by Kojève there in the pre-war period. But Dumézil kept fairly detailed notes on who attended his classes and Bataille’s name does not appear in those I have seen.

Later in Secularism and its Ambiguities, Ginzburg adds:

I suspect that historians of fascism have still to grasp the relevance of the Collège for their topic. This may not entirely be their fault. The pious attitude of Bataille’s later followers has created a sacred space around the man and his work, which may have discouraged outsiders (67).

The first half of this claim is, I think one worth pursuing. There is an interesting discussion between Jared Bly and Bataille’s recent editors Benjamin Noys and Alberto Toscano on this theme here. They provide some useful references to Benjamin’s reports back to Adorno and Horkheimer of what he was encountering in France. Toscano has of course discussed the parallels between diagnoses of earlier periods and their parallels and contrasts with our present in his Late Fascism. (I mention this briefly in another piece on an earlier theorist: Maria Antonietta Macciocchi – Althusser, Gramsci, Maoism, Fascism and Pasolini.)

My notes here hopefully give some of the further indications of texts where these questions are discussed in relation to Bataille and Caillois and some pointers for future work.

Update: two earlier pieces in this series, Claude Lévi-Strauss and Roger Caillois – Race, Games and a Ceremonial Sword and Walter Bruno Henning, Franz Altheim and the Politics of Reviews, provide other angles on the question of Caillois’s politics.

References

Acéphale: Religion-Sociologie-Philosophie, Paris: Jean-Michel Place, 1980 (facsimile reproduction of the original issues).

Dawn Ades and Simon Baker eds., Undercover Surrealism: Georges Bataille and Documents, London: The Hayward Gallery, 2006. 

Giorgio Agamben, “Bataille e il paradosso della sovranità”, in Jacqueline Risset ed., Georges Bataille: Il politico e il sacro, Naples: Liguori, 1988, 115-19, 115; “Bataille and the Paradox of Sovereignty”, trans. Michael Krimper, Journal of Italian Philosophy, 2000, 247-53.

Dudley Andrew and Steven Ungar, Popular Front Paris and the Poetics of Culture, Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 2005.

Georges Bataille, Œuvres complètes, Paris: Gallimard, twelve volumes, 1970-88. 

Georges Bataille, Visions of Excess: Selected Writings 1927-1939, ed. Allan Stoekl, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1985.

Georges Bataille, Lettres à Roger Caillois (4 août 1935-4 février 1959), ed. J.-P. Le Bouler, Paris: Folle Avoine, 1987.

Georges Bataille, Sur Nietzsche in Œuvres completes, Vol VI; On Nietzsche, trans. Stuart Kendall, New York: SUNY Press, 2015.

Georges Bataille and André Breton, « Contre-Attaque »: Union de lutte des intellectuels révolutionnaires: «Les Cahiers» et les autres documents, octobre 1935-mai 1936, Paris: Ypsilon, 2013.

Walter Benjamin, Selected Writings Vol 3, 1935-1938, eds. Howard Eiland and Michael W. Jennings, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2002.

Walter Benjamin, Selected Writings Vol 4, 1938-40, eds. Howard Eiland and Michael W. Jennings, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003.

Maurice Blanchot, Les Intellectuels en question: Ébauche d’une réflexion, Tours: Farrago, 2000; “Intellectuals under Scrutiny: An Outline for Thought” in The Blanchot Reader, ed. Michael Holland, Oxford: Blackwell, 1995, 206-27.

Jared Bly, “The Other Bataille: An Interview with Benjamin Noys and Alberto Toscano”, Journal of the History of Ideas blog, 2025, https://www.jhiblog.org/2025/03/05/the-other-bataille-an-interview-with-benjamin-noys-and-alberto-toscano/

Alastair Brotchie ed. Encyclopædia Acephalica, comprising the Critical Dictionary & Related Texts edited by Georges Bataille and the Encyclopædia Da Costa edited by Robert Lebel and Isabelle Waldberg, trans. Iain White and others, London: Atlas Press, 1995.

Roger Caillois, Approches de I’imaginaire, Paris: Gallimard, 1974. 

Stuart Elden, “Mitra-Varuna: A Re-Introduction to Georges Dumézil”, in Georges Dumézil, Mitra-Varuna: An Essay on Two Indo-European Representations of Sovereignty, translated by Derek Coltman, critical edition and introduction by Stuart Elden, afterword by Veena Das, HAU books, 2024, vii-xxvi.

Simonetta Falasca-Zamponi, Rethinking the Political: The Sacred, Aesthetic Politics, and the Collège de Sociologie, Montréal/Quebec: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2011.

Patrick ffrench, After Bataille: Sacrifice, Exposure, Community, London: Routledge, 2007.

Paul Foss-Heimlich, “Sade and Fourier and Klossowski and Benjamin”, in Pierre Klossowski, Living Currency, trans. Daniel W. Smith, Vernon W. Cisney, and Nicolae Morar, London: Bloomsbury, 2017, 97-122.

Marina Galletti and Alastair Brochie eds. The Sacred Conspiracy: The Internal Papers of the Secret Society of Acéphale and Lectures to the College of Sociology, ed., London: Atlas Press.

Carlo Ginzburg, Secularism and its Ambiguities: Four Case Studies, Budapest: Central European University Press, 2023.

Denis Hollier ed., Le Collège de Sociologie 1937-1939, Paris: Gallimard, 1995 [1979]; The College of Sociology (1937-1939), trans. Betsy Wing, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1988.

Denis Hollier, Absent without Leave: French Literature under the Threat of War, trans. Catherine Porter, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1997.

Pierre Klossowski, Un si funeste désir, Paris: Gallimard, 1963; Such a Deathly Desire, trans. Russell Ford, SUNY Press, 2007.

Gilles Lapouge, “Entretien avec Roger Caillois”, La Quinzaine littéraire 70, 16-30 June 1970, 6-8.

Stephan Moebius, Die Zauberlehrlinge: Soziogiegeschichte des Collège de Sociologie (1937-1939), Köln: UVK, 2006.

Jean-Maurice Monnoyer, Le Peintre et son démon: Entretiens avec Pierre Klossowski, Paris: Flammarion, 1985. 

Frank Pierce, “Introduction: The Collège de Sociologie and French Social Thought”, Economy and Society 32 (1), 2003, 1-6.

Michèle H. Richman, Sacred Revolutions: Durkheim and the Collège de Sociologie, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002.

Susan Rubin Suleiman, “Bataille in the Street: The Search for Virility in the 1930s”, Critical Inquiry 21 (1), 1994, 61-79.

Michel Surya, Georges Bataille: La mort à l’œuvre, Paris: Séguier, 1987; Georges Bataille: La Mort à l’œuvre, Paris: Gallimard Tel, revised edition, 2012; Georges Bataille: An Intellectual Biography, trans. Krzysztof Fijalkowski and Michael Richardson, London: Verso, 2002.

Alberto Toscano, Late Fascism: Race, Capitalism and the Politics of Crisis, London: Verso, 2023.


This is the 74th post of a weekly series, posted every Sunday throughout 2025, and continuing into a second year. The posts are short essays with indications of further reading and sources. They are not as formal as something I’d try to publish more conventionally, but are hopefully worthwhile as short sketches of histories and ideas. They are usually tangential to my main writing focus, a home for spare parts, asides, dead-ends and possible futures. I hope there is some interest in them. They are provisional and suggestions are welcome. A few, usually shorter, pieces in a similar style have been posted mid-week. I’m not sure I’ll keep to a weekly rhythm throughout 2026, but there will be at least a few more pieces.

The full chronological list of ‘Sunday histories’ is here, with a thematic ordering here.

Posted in Alberto Toscano, Friedrich Nietzsche, Georges Bataille, Georges Dumézil, Maurice Blanchot, Pierre Klossowski, Politics, Roger Caillois, Sunday Histories, Walter Benjamin | Leave a comment

Yannis Flytzanis ed. Henri Lefebvre – Space, Philosophy and the Political – Bloomsbury, July 2026

Yannis Flytzanis ed. Henri Lefebvre – Space, Philosophy and the Political – Bloomsbury, July 2026

A fresh interdisciplinary examination of the thought of Henri Lefebvre which sheds light on the politics of utopia and commoning through the examination of the wide-ranging socio-political dimensions of space.

The book emphasizes political elements of Lefebvre’s work that have been little explored in research such as his understanding of nationalism, ideology and anti-fascism, while further extending existing research on key concepts by Lefebvre, such as the right to the city, through interdisciplinary perspectives and interpretations. Chapters consider how Lefebvre’s thought can contribute to various fields of knowledge such as philosophy and critical studies, politics, space and urban studies, gender and the body. This collection sheds light on space as a site of political conflict and as a potential commons, as well as to raise new discussions and approaches to the question of self-governance.

Posted in Henri Lefebvre | Leave a comment

Timothy Mason Roberts, After Barbary: Algeria’s Role in the French and American Empires – Cornell University Press, December 2025 and New Books discussion

Timothy Mason Roberts, After Barbary: Algeria’s Role in the French and American Empires – Cornell University Press, 2025

New Books discussion with Miranda Melcher – thanks to dmf for the link

After Barbary explores the connection between the United States and North Africa between the Barbary Wars of the early nineteenth century and the era of European decolonization after World War II. Timothy Mason Roberts offers a new approach to the study of empires, highlighting the significance of Algeria in French-American relations from France’s first occupation of the country through the first years of independence of the Republic of Algeria.

As Roberts demonstrates, imperial authorities in Washington, DC; Paris; and Algiers rarely collaborated intentionally in institutional partnerships or alliances. Rather, American, French, and Algerian politicians, soldiers, writers, and revolutionaries—often acting at cross purposes and across political and cultural boundaries—sought power by imagining and constructing Algeria as a fissured, dynamic, transimperial space. Focusing on issues of settler colonialism, irregular warfare, racialized citizenship, territorial incorporation, and pan-African identity, After Barbary shows how French Algeria helped make the American and French empires.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Henry Snow, Control Science: How Management Made the Modern World – Verso, May 2026

Henry Snow, Control Science: How Management Made the Modern World – Verso, May 2026

Excerpt about the Bentham brothers and the Panopticon at History News Network – thanks to dmf for the link

What are the rules that govern our workday? Who made them? And how do these rules dominate the rest of our lives?

Whether on Caribbean plantations in the seven­teenth century or in Amazon warehouses today, the powerful have constantly developed new techniques to control workers—and new justifications for doing so. Ideas of control perfected on the factory floor have expanded to dictate our personal lives, polit­ical rights, national policy, and the global economy.

Seventeenth-century intellectuals such as William Petty and John Locke argued that human beings were selfish machines who had to be controlled for their own good. A century later, Jeremy and Samuel Bentham tried to do exactly that with their infamous Panopticon prison. When nineteenth-century Japa­nese elites imported European factory technologies, they came up with new theories of political control to justify this development. After the Second World War, the General Electric Corporation created an in­ternal propaganda department to fight unions, then pitched that propaganda to the country with the help of an actor, the future President Ronald Reagan. Ex­tending these practices, billionaires today dream of extending the algorithmic control of Amazon ware­houses into every corner of our lives.

Blending intellectual, economic, and labor history, Control Science is a thrilling and lucid work of his­tory. Henry Snow reveals how common sense about work, the economy, and human nature was fabricated and must now be challenged.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Goldie Osuri, Settler/Colonialism in Kashmir: Sovereignty, Catastrophe, Indigeneity – Manchester University Press, April 2026

Goldie Osuri, Settler/Colonialism in Kashmir: Sovereignty, Catastrophe, Indigeneity – Manchester University Press, April 2026

This book examines Indian rule in occupied Jammu and Kashmir through the lens of settler-colonial geopolitics. Engaging with settler-colonial, decolonial and Indigenous studies, the book traces how European sovereignty was shaped through settler-colonial practices that proved catastrophic for Indigenous worlds and helped generate today’s climate crisis. It argues that India draws on these same mechanisms in governing Kashmir, thereby fuelling ecological harm and reinforcing a global settler-colonial order. Analysing the India-China rivalry, Kashmir’s political economy and India’s indigenisation of Hindu sacred geography in the region, the book reframes Kashmiri resistance as an Indigenous anti-colonial struggle. By exploring the intersections of sovereignty, catastrophe, Indigeneity and ecology, it positions Kashmir within broader debates on settler-colonialism and planetary crises.

Interview about the book – thanks to John Hogan Morris for this link

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

M.X. Mitchell, Unsettling Sovereignty: International Law, Nuclear Weapons, and US Extraterritorial Power in Postwar Oceania – University of Chicago Press, October 2026

M.X. Mitchell, Unsettling Sovereignty: International Law, Nuclear Weapons, and US Extraterritorial Power in Postwar Oceania – University of Chicago Press, October 2026

Marshall Islanders and their ancestral lands and waters played important roles in reshaping the United States’ offshore power, state sovereignty, and the international politics of decolonization.

In the years following World War II, the United States conducted sixty-seven devastating nuclear blasts in the Marshall Islands—yet the archipelago was never a US territory. Working through the United Nations, US diplomats engineered a new, one-of-a-kind extraterritorial status, called strategic trusteeship, to control the Native lands, waters, and peoples of the Marshall, Caroline, and Northern Mariana Islands. Strategic trusteeship permitted the US to militarize a vast expanse of Western Oceania. This novel and racialized legal form of international dependency was integral to US nuclear weapons detonations and damage in the region.

In Unsettling Sovereignty, M. X. Mitchell recounts this untold legal history, exploring how nuclear weapons changed claims and practices of sovereignty from the 1940s to the present. US nuclear blasting in the Marshall Islands troubled conventional renderings of state sovereignty under international law. The explosions, disastrous for Marshallese communities and their ancestral atolls, also caused hazardous nuclear fallout, which spread around the globe. Islanders and their allies turned to law, using legal wrangling over blasting and fallout to raise new questions about the location, time, and subjects of state violence in a period of decolonization; the intersections between race, Indigeneity, and wide-scale technogenic harm; and the pitfalls and unfulfilled promises of international law. Mitchell shows that the Marshallese people and their lands and waters were, and remain, central to redefining sovereignty in an era of boundless pollution and climate change.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

I Cannot Submit to Injustices: Collected Works of Martin Sostre – ed. Garrett Felber, AK Press, May 2026

I Cannot Submit to Injustices: Collected Works of Martin Sostre – ed. Garrett Felber, AK Press, May 2026

Critical works by legendary Black radical and political prisoner Martin Sostre

I Cannot Submit to Injustices is a collection of works by Black Puerto Rican revolutionary Martin Sostre. As a founding figure of both the prison abolition movement and contemporary Black anarchism, Sostre’s eminence as a political thinker and tireless activist continues to gain wider recognition.

These texts represent decades of Sostre’s work as an agitator, teacher, and intellectual in the face of intense state repression, including years in solitary confinement as punishment for his activism. While in prison, Sostre established radical study groups and lending libraries, published several revolutionary newspapers, organized chapters of the Black Panther Party, and fought for the rights of incarcerated workers. A self-taught lawyer, Sostre’s strategy was to struggle on the offensive, pressing legal battles that established the constitutional rights of prisoners and refusing to submit to body searches by guards he deemed state-sanctioned sexual assault, for which he was beaten nearly a dozen times. With never-before-published interviews and speeches alongside powerful essays reproduced for the first time since their original publication, this volume offers readers overdue access to Sostre’s ideas about anarchism, armed struggle, and Black liberation in his own words.

A foreword by Lorenzo Kom’boa Ervin (Anarchism and the Black Revolution), who was introduced to anarchism by Sostre while they were imprisoned together, in conversation with William C. Anderson (Nation on No Map), reflects on Martin Sostre’s teachings on Black revolutionary organizing and on his enduring legacy in the Black radical tradition.

“If Attica fell to us in a matter of hours despite it being your most secure maximum security prison-fortress equipped with your latest repressive technology, so shall fall all your fortresses, inside and out. Revolutionary spirit conquers all obstacles.” —Martin Sostre, “The New Prisoner” (1973)

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Mario Meliadò ed. Thinking in the Margins: Marginalia in Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy – De Gruyter Brill, 2026 (print and open access)

Mario Meliadò ed. Thinking in the Margins: Marginalia in Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy – De Gruyter Brill, 2026 (print and open access)

The chapters in this book reflect on the special status of marginalia as an object of historical-philosophical interpretation and critical editions. They examine the practices of reading and writing from which this text form and the diversity of its purposes and contexts emerged. The focus is on the Latin, Arabic, and Hebrew philosophical traditions of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Adam Moore, The Difference Place Makes: Peacebuilding and Bosnia’s Arizona Market – Stanford University Press, May 2026

Adam Moore, The Difference Place Makes: Peacebuilding and Bosnia’s Arizona Market – Stanford University Press, May 2026

How do places shape peacebuilding interventions? Put simply, they are eventful. Geographers have long argued that places are constituted by relations with the wider world, relations that are always in flux. In this theoretically and empirically innovative book Adam Moore argues that the inverse is also true: places are generative of relations. People and institutions are constituted by their relations with places, relations that extend beyond a particular place in question itself. Drawing on relational and processual perspectives across the social sciences, Moore analyzes the effects that an infamous black market in postwar Bosnia—the Arizona market—had on peacebuilding projects and actors, and sociopolitical relations across the country more generally. Through encounters with, and narratives about, the market, the relations and politics of various actors in Bosnia at the time—from the UN to ordinary citizens—were transformed. Arizona’s effects also radiated across time and space, even after it was dismantled, influencing political and social relations in Bosnia and further afield up to the present day. Bringing together scholarship in geography and peace and conflict studies, this book is a must-read for both fields and beyond.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Paul Griffin and Cheryl McGeachan, Historical Geography: The Basics – Routledge, December 2025

Paul Griffin and Cheryl McGeachan, Historical Geography: The Basics – Routledge, December 2025

Historical Geographies: The Basics provides readers with a thorough grounding in a sub-discipline that revisits the past through a geographical lens. It encourages the reader to pursue researching the past in a usable manner, reflecting on the role of the past in the present and how it might inform geographical thinking.

Across seven chapters, the authors guide readers through their engagement with the past, via direct encounters with archives and memories, as well as buildings, artefacts and landscapes. It poses critical reflections on how we might work with the potential gaps and fragments in revisiting the past and the ways in which we can follow traces to unearth hidden histories. In doing so, it covers both conceptual questions and practical skills in historical geography. Critical questions include; how might we apply concepts and theories to case studies from the past? How does a researcher move from an historical idea, through to working in an archive, to writing historical geographies? Similarly, and perhaps more practically, how can we find archives or historical methods that work for our project?

The book will be of particular value to undergraduate and postgraduate geographers and historians. Whether taking a historical geography module, preparing a historical geography dissertation, or reflecting on how the past might inform engagement with geographical study, this book will provide a foundational understanding of the sub-discipline for students of global history, environmental history and further afield.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment