Henri Lefebvre, On the Rural – 40% off outside the Americas

Henri Lefebvre, On the Rural is currently available at 40% off outside the Americas from Combined Academic Publishers.

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Two new reviews of Henri Lefebvre, On the Rural (University of Minnesota Press, 2022)

Two new reviews of Henri Lefebvre, On the Rural: Economy, Sociology, Geography (University of Minnesota Press, 2022)

Caleb Gallemore in New Political Science

Joseph Pierce in Economic Geography

Both require subscription, unfortunately.

Here’s the start of Pierce’s review:

Stuart Elden and Adam David Morton, as editors of On the Rural, have assembled a strange, slightly lumpy set of conference presentations, chapters, scholarly essays, and even a review essay of another text into a volume that illustrates a key arc in the intellectual life of Henri Lefebvre: his slow journey from a focus on agrarian and peasant concerns to a focus on the urban. In the end, I think the book reveals more to today’s urban scholars than to its ruralists. Yet, precisely where the text fits in the canon surrounding Lefebvre’s writing is hard to definitively articulate because of how his work 1 has been extended by Anglophone scholars since the 1990s. This is a worthwhile book, but I think it will leave some audiences cold and others uneasy about the implications it has for the past thirty years of scholarship building on Lefebvre in translation.

Elden and Morton’s lengthy introduction serves as an excellent interpretive orientation to the text—which is good, because this amalgamation absolutely requires one. The introduction is eloquent, readable, and usefully knits the various texts together, pro- viding essential historic and scholarly context for the chapters that follow. At a high level, the book is organized largely chronologically from the late 1940s to the early 1960s, with two exceptions: the introduction to From the Rural to the Urban, which sits at the beginning of this volume but was initially published in French in 1969; and The Marxist-Leninist Theory of Ground Rent, positioned in the middle of the volume but first published in French [actually Spanish, SE] in 1964. I will return to the latter of these in a moment.

And the end of Gallemore’s review:

In closing, a few words of caution are in order. First, Lefebvre can be a very frustrating writer, even with the help of a carefully curated translation and a very clear introductory essay from the volume’s editors. I suspect that for most readers (certainly including myself), multiple readings will be necessary for the ideas in these essays to be of use or inspiration. On the other hand, it is certainly a testimony to the depth of these materials that they reward multiple readings. Second, as the editors note in their introduction, Lefebvre’s analysis of gender is almost nonexistent and, where present, relatively superficial. The same is generally true for issues of race. In short, for those wishing to go beyond a fairly strict class analysis of agricultural transitions to capitalism, it will be absolutely necessary to put Lefebvre in dialogue with other authors. Third, while the empirical detail present in some of these essays is quite impressive and sheds light on Lefebvre as a sociologist and historian, it may be a bit irrelevant to those not already interested in European agricultural history. Still, as existence proofs of some of Lefebvre’s claims, even these sections can be interesting. This is particularly the case for the final essay in the volume, which provides a detailed history of the complex institutional struggles over land control in the area sur- rounding a village in the Pyrenees, illustrating the complex ways past institutional choices impinge on current practices.

In short, On the Rural is likely to intrigue readers with a diverse set of interests, but they will be best served to approach the volume with a clear idea of what they hope to get out of it, alongside a recognition that getting something out of it may require some fairly careful textual work. It is a valuable contribution to the body of Lefebvre’s work available in English translation.

An earlier review in Cleveland Review of Books by John Lepley is available open access.

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Serge Livrozet (1939-2022)

News of the death of Serge Livrozet, who worked with Foucault in the GIP in the early 1970s, along with a link to the documentary about him by Nicolas Drolc, La Mort se mérite.

Clare O'Farrell's avatarFoucault News

L’écrivain Serge Livrozet, anarchiste et militant anti-carcéral, est mort à 83 ans
franceinfo: Culture 30/11/2022

Figure des milieux anarchistes, il fut l’un des meneurs des révoltes qui ébranlèrent les prisons françaises dans les années 70. Il s’est éteint chez lui dans la région niçoise, “des suites d’une longue maladie”, ont annoncé mercredi ses proches à l’AFP.

Il était une figure des milieux anarchistes et anti-carcéraux, du Comité d’action des prisonniers de Michel Foucault à Mai-68 et il avait participé aux débuts du quotidien Libération. Serge Livrozet est mort dans la région de Nice à 83 ans, ont annoncé mercredi ses proches à l’AFP. L’intellectuel s’est éteint “des suites d’une longue maladie”, ont-ils précisé, rappelant qu’il fut “l’un des meneurs des révoltes qui secouèrent les prisons françaises dans les années 1970”.

Plombier, perceur de coffres-forts, puis écrivain
Né le 21 octobre 1939 à Toulon, issu d’un milieu modeste, Serge Livrozet racontait…

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Special Issue – Call for papers: Foucault’s Legacy in Contemporary Thinking (2022)

Special Issue of Foucault Studies – Call for papers: Foucault’s Legacy in Contemporary Thinking: Forty Years Later (1984-2024)

Clare O'Farrell's avatarFoucault News

Special Issue – Call for papers: Foucault’s Legacy in Contemporary Thinking

Foucault Studies and special issue editors Valentina Antoniol and Stefano Marino invite authors to reflect on Foucault’s legacy forty years after his untimely death in 1984 and submit their manuscripts for this special issue.

Please see the following document for more details on the topic and submission details:

Call for Paper – Foucault’s Legacy in Contemporary Thinking

Please note that the referencing and footnotes must be in accordance with the Foucault Studies guidelines. Please see attached document for guidance:

Foucault Studies Author Guidelines footnotes references

Foucault’s Legacy in Contemporary Thinking: Forty Years Later (1984-2024)

Special issue editors
Valentina Antoniol, University of Bologna Stefano Marino, University of Bologna

Introduction
Michel Foucault has been undoubtedly one of the most important and most influential intel- lectuals of the 20th century. With such seminal works as Histoire de la folie à l’âge classique

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Colloque international. Michel Foucault et les années 1950 Entre philosophie et sciences humaines (2022)

Colloque international: Michel Foucault et les années 1950
Entre philosophie et sciences humaines, 8 et 9 décembre 2022 | Université Paris 8

Clare O'Farrell's avatarFoucault News

Colloque international
Michel Foucault et les années 1950
Entre philosophie et sciences humaines

8 et 9 décembre 2022 | Université Paris 8

Accès libre dans la limite des places disponibles.
Contact : orazio.irrera02@univ-paris8.fr

Programme PDF

Colloque international organisé par Orazio IRRERA en collaboration avec le Département de Philosophie de l’Université Paris 8 Vincennes – Saint-Denis, le Laboratoire des Logiques Contemporaines de la Philosophie (LLCP, EA 4008), le Centre Michel Foucault et la revue « materiali foucaultiani ».

La tout récente parution des trois volumes de la série « Cours et travaux de Michel Foucault avant le Collège de France » dans la collection « Hautes études » chez les éditeurs EHESS-Gallimard-Seuil, Binswanger et l’analyse existentielle (2021), Phénoménologie et psychologie (2021), La question anthropologique. Cours. 1954-1955 (2022), dont l’édition a été réalisée à partir des matériaux inédits du Fonds Michel Foucault déposé à la Bibliothèque nationale (NAF 28730), contribue à jeter…

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Mary Bosworth and Lucia Zedner (eds.), Privatising Border Control: Law at the Limits of the Sovereign State – Oxford University Press, January 2023

Mary Bosworth and Lucia Zedner, Privatising Border Control: Law at the Limits of the Sovereign State – Oxford University Press, January 2023

In recent years, many breaches of immigration law have been criminalised. Foreign nationals are now routinely identified in court and in prison as subjects for deportation. Police at the border and within the territory refer foreign suspects to immigration authorities for expulsion. Within the immigration system, new institutions and practices rely on criminal justice logic and methods. In these examples, it is not the state that controls the national border: instead, it is often privately contracted companies. 

This collection of essays explores the growing use of the private sector and private actors in border control and its implications for our understanding of state sovereignty and citizenship. Privatising Border Control is an important empirical and theoretical contribution to the growing, interdisciplinary body of scholarship on border control. It also contributes to the academic inquiry into the growing privatisation of policing and punishment. These domains, once regarded as central to the state’s police power and its monopoly on violence, are increasingly outsourced to private providers. 

With contributions from scholars across a range of jurisdictions and disciplines, including Criminology, Law, and Political Science, Privatising Border Control provides a novel and comparative account of contemporary border control policy and practice. This is a must-read for academics, practitioners, and policymakers interested in immigration law and the growing use of the private sector and private actors in border control.

Posted in Boundaries, Politics, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Books received – Lévi-Strauss, Althusser, Leroi-Gourhan, Person, Loyer, Soulier, Derrida

Mainly bought new and second-hand in Paris, but also A. Person, Directorship: Searching for Politics’ Copernican Moment, sent to me anonymously by the author.

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Foucault on the radio, 1975 – a different, edited translation of an interesting interview

In 1975, Foucault was interviewed by Jacques Chancel on the radio. It is reprinted in Dits et écrits as text 161, “Radioscopie de Michel Foucault”. The French text is here and the recording here.

Comparing the transcription and the recording shows that it has been cleaned up quite a bit – the recording is a bit more informal in places, and some of the hesitations or the bits where Foucault and Chancel talk over each other have been tidied.

The translation which I knew about before is included in Foucault: Live as ‘Talk Show’. Like other translations in that collection it isn’t always entirely reliable, and it’s possible that it was made direct from the recording, rather than the publication. Especially towards the end, some bits are not translated.

But there is a different, albeit heavily edited, translation of this interesting interview, which appeared in Impulse, Vol 15 No 1, Winter 1989, pp. 50-55. It was transcribed by Lisa Webster, and translated by Ronald B. DeSousa.

The scans are taken from a copy of Impulse from the library of Amy White, an artist based in the US, who brought this version of the interview to my attention. A pdf of the translation is available here.

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Robyn Bartel & Jennifer Carter (eds.), Handbook on Space, Place and Law – Edward Elgar, 2022

Robyn Bartel & Jennifer Carter (eds.), Handbook on Space, Place and Law – Edward Elgar, 2022

Unlike many of these handbooks, this is available as a paperback and e-book as well as hardback. Some sample material is available here.

This innovative Handbook provides an expansive interrogation of the spaces and places of law, exploring how we engage relationally in a material world, within which we are inter-dependent and reliant, and governed by laws in a dynamic process. It advances novel insights into the numerous intersections of space, place and law in our lives.

International contributors offer a range of activity-orientated analyses, focusing on methodology, embodied experience, legal pluralism, conflict and resistance, and non-human and place agency. The Handbook examines a number of cross-cutting themes including social inequality, environmental justice, sustainability, urban development, indigenous legal systems, the effects of colonialism and property law. Representing a diversity of locales from all around the world, the chapters encompass both urban and rural, terrestrial and marine areas, agential and storied spaces, and fictional as well as ‘real’ places.

Taking a multi-disciplinary approach that incorporates law, human and legal geography, planning, sociology, political ecology, anthropology, and beyond, this comprehensive Handbook will be critical reading for scholars and students of these and cognate areas. Its discussion of empirical examples will also be beneficial for practitioners and policymakers interested in these fields. 

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Biko Mandela Gray and Ryan J. Johnson, Phenomenology of Black Spirit – Edinburgh University Press, 2022

Biko Mandela Gray and Ryan J. Johnson, Phenomenology of Black Spirit – Edinburgh University Press, 2022

Just an expensive hardback at the moment, unfortunately, but Ryan has shared a 30% discount code (NEW30).

What if the protagonist of Hegel’s Phenomenology were Black? 

Ryan Johnson and Biko Mandela Gray study the relationship between Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit and Black Thought from Frederick Douglass to Angela Davis

  • The first philosophy book written, in a single voice, by a Black philosopher and a white philosopher
  • Dramatizes a dialectical parallelism between Hegel’s Phenomenology and Black Thought
  • Diversifies and transforms the history of philosophy by forcing canonical thinkers into direct dialogue with 19th-20th-century African American, African, and Africana thinkers
  • Expands Hegel Studies by including habitually excluded perspectives and voices
  • Champions the history of African American Philosophy
  • Articulates the expansiveness and interdisciplinarity of Black Thought

This staging of an elongated dialectical parallelism between Hegel’s classic text and major 19th-20th-century Black thinkers explodes the western canon of philosophy. Johnson and Mandela Gray show that Hegel’s abstract dialectic is transformed and critiqued when put into conversation with the lived dialectics of Black Thought: from Frederick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs through to Malcolm X and Angela Davis.

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