Trevor Paglen, How to See Like a Machine: Images After AI – Verso, May 2026

Trevor Paglen, How to See Like a Machine: Images After AI – Verso, May 2026

We once looked at pictures. Then, with the advent of computer vision and machine learning, pictures started looking at us. By the award-winning artist, filmmaker and thinker.

Today our world is under the watchful and tireless eye of computer vision, with cam­eras and monitors tracing our every move. Furthermore, generative AI is now able to render a synthetic world indistinguishable from reality for us to explore. Trevor Paglen goes in search of the ways and means of understanding this new visual universe. Instead of asking what these technologies “say” about the world, he teaches us to ask what they “do” and where such images come from.

Exploring the esoteric worlds of psyops, UFO imagery, magicians, and public relation gurus, Paglen shows that this appar­ently alien realm is more human, but much stranger, than we imagine.

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Audio recording of Foucault’s interview with Charles Ruas about Raymond Roussel now online

The audio recording of Foucault’s interview with Charles Ruas about Raymond Roussel is now online.

Foucault did this interview late in life, about one of his least-known books, translated into English as Death and the Labyrinth: The World of Raymond Roussel. When I was doing the research for my books on Foucault, I realised that the French and English versions of this interview were not the same. Despite the version in Dits et écrits claiming to be a translation of the English version, it is actually a reprint of a French version. I explain this in more detail here, which has a brief comment from Ruas clarifying the different versions.

Many thanks to Philippe Chevallier for sending the link to the audio recordings.

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Daniel Maudlin, A Night at the Inn: Space, Place, and the Elite Experience of Empire, 1650–1850 – Oxford University Press, June 2026

Daniel Maudlin, A Night at the Inn: Space, Place, and the Elite Experience of Empire, 1650–1850 – Oxford University Press, June 2026

A bold reinterpretation of Georgian Britian and North America that puts inns at the heart of the imperial project.

Inns were ubiquitous across the Anglo-American world of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. During this period, inn going was universal among the elite citizens of that world and they feature prominently in contemporary accounts and literature as places of rest, refreshment, and good cheer.

A Night at the Inn follows the experiences of an elite traveller on a journey through the North Atlantic world. What becomes clear along the way is that inns were much more than somewhere for a drink, a meal and a bed for the night; they played a central role in what was first a British, later Anglophone, process of national and imperial placemaking. Whether in Scotland, Virginia, or Jamaica, ‘principal inns’ contained the useful spaces and things that society’s ruling elites needed to establish and maintain power. Moreover, familiar in their sameness, from one inn to the next the material world experienced inside principal inns shaped elite inn-goers’ perceptions of place, confirming that here – wherever here was – was somewhere familiar, somewhere ‘civilised’, somewhere British.

Highly illustrated and drawing on extensive field studies, archival and literary sources, A Night at the Inn offers a new reading of the everyday places and spaces that made and sustained the British Empire, and whose legacies continue to reverberate today.

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Eli B. Lichtenstein, Partisan Genealogy: Foucault’s Critique of Penal Power – SUNY Press, November 2026

Eli B. Lichtenstein, Partisan Genealogy: Foucault’s Critique of Penal Power – SUNY Press, November 2026

Just a very expensive hardback listed at the moment, unfortunately.

Presents a partisan model of genealogy by reinterpreting Foucault in the context of anti-prison struggles and his engagement with Marxism.

Michel Foucault has exerted enormous influence on our understanding of power and penal systems, above all with his work Discipline and Punish. However, the latter is often read as a pessimistic text that resigns us to accepting the unshakeable hold of power and the futility of resistance. Eli B. Lichtenstein challenges such pessimism by reconstructing the radical critique of penal power that Foucault developed prior to the publication of Discipline and Punish. He argues that in the early 1970s, Foucault employed a distinct genealogical method designed to further struggles against penal systems, and that he expanded critiques of repression and the prison to encompass broader social structures. This book also reconsiders Foucault’s much-debated relationship to Marxism. It argues that Foucault extensively engaged Marxist theory in order to more adequately theorize the links between capitalism and other modes of domination. Through its major reinterpretation of Foucault’s political thought, Partisan Genealogy offers a timely examination of the capitalist foundations of penal power and explains how genealogy crafts tools for use in the urgent struggles of the present.

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Edward Jones-Imhotep, The Broken Machine: Histories of Technology, Social Order, and the Self – MIT Press, May 2026 (print and open access)

Edward Jones-Imhotep, The Broken Machine: Histories of Technology, Social Order, and the Self – MIT Press, May 2026 (print and open access)

A cultural history of technological breakdown, social order, and the self in the modern Atlantic World.

The Broken Machine explores the intertwined histories of breaking machines, social order, and the self in the modern Atlantic World. Edward Jones-Imhotep reveals how breakdowns are not the kinds of objects we imagine. More than just material failures or social disruptions, since the 18th century, breakdowns served as moments for defining a modern technological self and the core values of social order in Western democracies: what kinds of people belonged to it, what virtues they should possess, and who stood outside it.

Tracing this politics of breakdown and belonging across two centuries and two continents, the book rewrites five well-known episodes in the history of technology, influential histories that we thought we knew: the politics of the guillotine during the French Revolution, the causes of railway accidents and the rise of “systems” as a tool of self-responsibility and self-governance in Victorian Britain, the surprising antebellum history of breakdown in American slave cultures, the Gantt chart’s origins as a Progressive Era tool for linking failure as a condition of industrial machinery to failure as a kind of person in the US, and, finally, the electronic malfunctions during the Cold War that helped define the rational selves underpinning Western democracy.

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Marco Brigaglia, Foucault on Power, Law, and Society: A Reappraisal – Routledge, 2026

Marco Brigaglia, Foucault on Power, Law, and Society: A Reappraisal – Routledge, February 2026

Thanks to Foucault News for the link

This book offers a detailed analysis and reappraisal of Michel Foucault’s work on power, law, and society.

Highlighting the ambiguities, tensions, inconsistencies, and transformations in Foucault’s work, the book shows how, in Foucault’s later years, his ideas gradually converged toward a conception of power that was significantly different from the one that emerges from the works and courses of the mid-1970s, and which came to provide the mainstream understanding of his thought. From the vantage point of this later conception, the book is then able to reframe the tensions and inconsistencies in Foucault’s thought as parts of a multiplex but coherent conceptual system. Foucault’s theses on the development of techniques of power since the 18th century, and on the impact of these developments affected the structure of modern law, are then reformulated to offer a more comprehensive and more balanced appraisal of their significance.

Foucault on Power, Law, and Society will appeal to theorists in law, philosophy, and political science, as well as others with interests in the perpetually influential work of Michel Foucault on power.

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Books received – Pateman, Hubert, Droit, Derrida, Sharpe, Heidegger

Trevor Pateman’s Culture as Anarchy; Henri Hubert’s Les Germains; the collection Les Grecs, les Romains et nous, edited by Roger Pol Droit; Derrida’s De la grammatologie; Alex Sharpe’s We’re Nobody’s Children: David Bowie and Existentialism and Heidegger’s Being and Time: An Annotated Translation, by Cyril Welch.

Trevor and Alex kindly sent copies of their books. I read Alex’s book in manuscript, and Trevor sent his after I shared his very interesting “Roland Barthes: Writer, Intellectual, and also Professor”Barthes Studies, 2025 (open access). The Hubert is perhaps the saddest of all books – a former library copy with uncut pages. The new Heidegger translation is interesting – I plan a post probably on Sunday with an initial analysis of some of the passages about space and spatiality.

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Erin Torkelson, Predatory Welfare: Debt, Race, and Cash Transfers – Duke University Press, May 2026

Erin Torkelson, Predatory Welfare: Debt, Race, and Cash Transfers – Duke University Press, May 2026

In Predatory Welfare, Erin Torkelson explores how the direct cash transfer program instituted in South Africa revised and reworked post-apartheid racialized and gendered dispossession, despite its promise of ameliorating extreme poverty. Beginning in 2012, she focuses on how poor Black South African women asserted their entitlements to social assistance and responsibilities for familial care against the pressures of expropriation built into the grant payment system. Because the grants did not cover monthly bills, recipients were pushed into predatory loans collateralized by welfare payments. Torkelson finds that the state-sponsored but privately-run program was fundamentally undermined by its reliance on digital financial technologies which encoded wider forces of colonial rule, nationalist politics, and global development. Even when the government assumed control of grant payment in 2018, the neoliberal bent of fiscal policy continued to drive recipients into debt in new ways. Drawing on seven years of ethnographic fieldwork and organization—in grant payment queues, loan offices, grocery stores, Parliament, and the Constitutional Court—Torkelson demonstrates how cash transfers can offer a means to making racial capitalism more acceptable and how recipients can push back to demand reparation.

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Peter Johnson, Philosophy for a Time of Crisis: Michel Serres and Climate Change – independently published, January 2026 (ebook free for limited time)

Peter Johnson, Philosophy for a Time of Crisis: Michel Serres and Climate Change – independently published, January 2026

The ebook is free on Amazon from 18 May to 22 May 2026

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Leslie C. Dunn and Avi Mendelson eds. Shakespeare and Early Modern Madness – Springer, May 2026

Leslie C. Dunn and Avi Mendelson eds. Shakespeare and Early Modern Madness – Springer, May 2026

Shakespeare and Early Modern Madness, the first collection to focus on madness and mental health in early modern drama, is energized by the belief that madness is a variable concept, situated among a rapidly shifting series of cultural vectors. In addition to investigating the ubiquity of mental health tropes in Shakespearean theater, and their appearance in plays by Ben Jonson and Christopher Marlowe, the volume showcases Renaissance madness’s impressive variety: its affiliation with mental states as different as demonic possession, melancholic dreams, ecstasy and rapture, rage and fury, excessive grief, and aesthetic pleasure. The essays further demonstrate that madness in early modern drama can be approached through a diverse array of critical perspectives; their authors pull not only from historicist methodologies, disability studies, mad studies, and theories of gender and race, but also from the psychological and psychiatric sciences. The volume concludes with a section on activism and pedagogy, which asks how we can use early modern plays to promote the inclusion of students and scholars with lived experience of neurodiversity. 

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