Monthly Archives: March 2025

Troubling Classical Bodies, Remarque Institute, New York University, 11 April 2025, 12.30pm and online – Brooke Holmes, Anurima Banerji and Stuart Elden

Troubling Classical Bodies, Remarque Institute, New York University, 11 April 2025, 12.30pm and online – Brooke Holmes, Anurima Banerji and Stuart Elden I’ll be speaking about an aspect of my Indo-European project, on an early text by Émile Benveniste about … Continue reading

Posted in Conferences, Emile Benveniste, Mapping Indo-European Thought in Twentieth Century France, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Richard Carter-White and Claudio Minca, A Spatial Theory of the Camp: Geopolitics, Biopolitics and the Immunitarian State – Edward Elgar, February 2025 (open access)

Richard Carter-White and Claudio Minca, A Spatial Theory of the Camp: Geopolitics, Biopolitics and the Immunitarian State – Edward Elgar, February 2025 (open access) The link for the entire book is at the bottom of the page This is an open … Continue reading

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The Territory of the Vocabulary and the Vocabulary of Territory: Emile Benveniste 

If I was writing The Birth of Territory again, I would certainly have found a little space for a brief discussion of Émile Benveniste and his Le Vocabulaire des institutions indo-européennes, now available in English again as the Dictionary of Indo-European Concepts and Society and open access … Continue reading

Posted in Antoine Meillet, Emile Benveniste, Georges Dumézil, Mapping Indo-European Thought in Twentieth Century France, Reinhart Koselleck, Sunday Histories, Territory, Terror and Territory, The Birth of Territory | 6 Comments

Edwin D. Rose, Reading the World: British Practices of Natural History, 1760-1820 – University of Pittsburgh Press, March 2025

Edwin D. Rose, Reading the World: British Practices of Natural History, 1760-1820 – University of Pittsburgh Press, March 2025 In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries—a period that marked the emergence of a global modernity—educated landowners, or “gentlemen,” dominated the development … Continue reading

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Lea Ypi, Indignity: A Life Reimagined – Farrar, Straus and Giroux, April 2025

Lea Ypi, Indignity: A Life Reimagined – Farrar, Straus and Giroux, April 2025 The author of Free returns with an extraordinary inquiry into historical injustice, dignity, truth, and imagination.  When Lea Ypi discovers a photo of her grandmother, Leman, honeymooning in the … Continue reading

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Kostas Axelos, The Game of the World, trans. Justin Clemens and Hellmut Munz – Edinburgh University Press, April 2023, paperback February 2025

Kostas Axelos, The Game of the World, trans. Justin Clemens and Hellmut Munz – Edinburgh University Press, April 2023, paperback February 2025 Now in paperback

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Laleh Khalili, Extractive Capitalism: How Commodities and Cronyism Drive the Global Economy – Verso, August 2025

Laleh Khalili, Extractive Capitalism: How Commodities and Cronyism Drive the Global Economy – Verso, August 2025 An eye-opening survey of how extractive industries power globalization and how to fight back, by one of the world’s leading experts on the oil … Continue reading

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A panel discussion of Chris Philo, Adorno and the Antifascist Geographical Imagination, London Group of Historical Geographers, 27 May 2025, 5.30pm, online

27 May 2025, 5.30pm, discussion of Chris Philo, Adorno and the Antifascist Geographical Imagination (Edinburgh University Press, June 2025) London Group of Historical Geographers

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MEGA (from the Historical-Critical Dictionary of Marxism) – translated at Historical Materialism by Kaan Kangal

MEGA (from the Historical-Critical Dictionary of Marxism) – translated at Historical Materialism by Kaan Kangal Translation of the entry ‘MEGA’ in the Historical-Critical Dictionary of Marxism (Historisch-Kritisches Wörterbuch des Marxismus[HKWM]), vol. 9/I (Hamburg: Argument, 2018), pp. 388-404. Part I written by Rolf … Continue reading

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Robert Lucas Scott, Reading Hegel: Irony, Recollection, Critique – University of Chicago Press, March 2025

Robert Lucas Scott, Reading Hegel: Irony, Recollection, Critique – University of Chicago Press, March 2025 The relationship between Hegel and literary theory has for a long time been both contested and paradoxical. On the one hand, “theory” is often skeptical … Continue reading

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