Sun-Young Park, Ideals of the Body: Architecture, Urbanism, and Hygiene in Postrevolutionary Paris – U Pittsburgh Press, 2018

9780822945284-380x542.jpgSun-Young Park, Ideals of the Body: Architecture, Urbanism, and Hygiene in Postrevolutionary Paris – University of Pittsburgh Press, 2018

Modern hygienic urbanism originated in the airy boulevards, public parks, and sewer system that transformed the Parisian cityscape in the mid-nineteenth century. Yet these well-known developments in public health built on a previous moment of anxiety about the hygiene of modern city dwellers. Amid fears of national decline that accompanied the collapse of the Napoleonic Empire, efforts to modernize Paris between 1800 and 1850 focused not on grand and comprehensive structural reforms, but rather on improving the bodily and mental fitness of the individual citizen. These forgotten efforts to renew and reform the physical and moral health of the urban subject found expression in the built environment of the city—in the gymnasiums, swimming pools, and green spaces of private and public institutions, from the pedagogical to the recreational. Sun-Young Park reveals how these anxieties about health and social order, which manifested in emerging ideals of the body, created a uniquely spatial and urban experience of modernity in the postrevolutionary capital, one profoundly impacted by hygiene, mobility, productivity, leisure, spectacle, and technology.

We know quite a bit about the physical signatures of urban “modernity” foisted upon Paris by Baron Haussmann in the late nineteenth century — the broad boulevards, networked infrastructures, connected apartment houses, and assorted monuments — but little scholarship has seized on its precursors in the half-century prior. In Ideals of the Body: Architecture, Urbanism, and Hygiene in Postrevolutionary Paris(University of Pittsburgh Press, 2018), Sun-Young Park turns to another modernity, recovering a daunting array of Romantic and especially post-Napoleonic interventions — less spectacular but arguably more complex — on mobile Parisian bodies and the everyday spaces that host them. Park considers military gymnasia, schools, barracks, leisure gardens, and other spaces purpose-built to inculcate vigor in both individuated physical bodies and, their proponents hoped amid specters of national decline, in the French body politic. Each of these spaces, Park shows, a “threshold” between fully private and fully public realms, helped install — albeit imperfectly — its own “ideal” of the sanitized and gendered human subject. Ideals of the Body is a detailed, visually rich, theoretically motivated study in urban and architectural history, one that just might realign how we periodize and make sense of urban modernity writ large.

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‘Imagining a territory. The construction and representation of territory in late medieval Europe’ (Workshop, Amsterdam, 18-19 January 2019)

A report on what sounds like a really interesting conference on territory in late Medieval Europe.

Kim Overlaet's avatarImagined territories

A report by Bente Marschall and Bastiaan Van den Akker

On the 18th and 19th of January 2019, the University of Amsterdam (UvA) hosted a workshop titled ‘Imagining a territory. The construction and representation of territory in late medieval Europe’. The premise of the workshop organised by the ‘Imagining a territory’ project (NWO/ UvA)was the fluidity and multiplicity of the concept of territory in a period before the availability of accurate scale maps, and before the use of this concept in secular political thought and practice. Scholars were invited to discuss the ways in which this modern concept can be used as an analytical tool in medieval studies. By using administrative, cartographic, heraldic, narrative and military sources for specific geographical and historical case studies, all participants have presented inspiring perspectives on the dynamics between the construction, maintenance and representations of late medieval territories and territorial affiliations, and as such contributed…

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Jenny Edkins and Maja Zehfuss (eds), Global Politics, third edition – Routledge, January 2019

Now published – the third edition of Global Politics, edited by Jenny Edkins and Maja Zehfuss.

stuartelden's avatarProgressive Geographies

9781138060296Jenny Edkins and Maja Zehfuss (eds), Global Politics, third edition – Routledge, January 2019

The third edition of Global Politics: A New Introduction continues to provide a completely original way of teaching and learning about world politics. The book engages directly with the issues in global politics that students are most interested in, helping them to understand the key questions and theories and also to develop a critical and inquiring perspective.

Completely revised and updated throughout, the third edition offers up-to-date examples engaging with the latest developments in global politics, including the Syrian war and the refugee crisis, fossil fuel divestment, racism and Black Lives Matter, citizen journalism, populism, and drone warfare.

Global Politics:

  • examines the most significant issues in global politics – from war, peacebuilding, terrorism, security, violence, nationalism and authority to poverty, development, postcolonialism, human rights, gender, inequality, ethnicity and what we can do to change…

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The Early Foucault Update 23: the Hegel thesis and other manuscripts, Jean Wahl and Maladie mentale

MMPe-MMPs.jpeg

First edition (in a protective wrap), second edition, current edition and translation

I’ve been continuing work on The Early Foucault manuscript, which is coming together quite well. After the Christmas and New Year break, I submitted a book review and chapter on quite different topics. I’m now in Paris, where I’ve been spending time at the manuscripts room at the BnF-Richelieu, but also going to the BnF-Mitterand and Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève for books and journals. The main thing I’ve been doing with the manuscripts is working on Foucault’s Hegel thesis from 1949, and drafting a section of a chapter discussing this, and going back over some of Foucault’s notes from his own reading in preparation for his early books. To get an idea of what those notes look like, the contents of one box, of preparatory materials for Les mots et les choses [The Order of Things], have been digitized and are available here. These give a good indication of how Foucault took notes and organized them into thematic folders. I’ve been mainly working on the notes relating to History of Madness and Birth of the Clinic, but also looking again at his notes on German philosophy from the 1950s.

As well as the manuscripts, I’ve mainly been working with some of Jean Wahl’s courses, some of which Foucault attended and which I’m increasingly realising are significant in his development. Several of Wahl’s courses were published, some as proper books, others by the Centre de Documentation Universitaire as bound typescripts. I spent far too long trying to work out details of how Wahl had access to courses by Heidegger, which at that time were unpublished. Wahl died in 1974, the year before the Gesamtausgabe began publication, but he was referring to courses by Heidegger as early as 1946. The source for these seems to be Alexandre Koyré, who certainly attended some Heidegger’s lectures in the late 1920s. But accounts I’ve found are misleading about which course or courses Wahl was referring to. This has taken me through editions of Wahl’s courses, to recollections by him and Jean Beaufret, and Dominique Janicaud’s Heidegger en France. (Of course, some of Heidegger’s courses were published in his lifetime, but not the ones I’m concerned with here. In particular his 1935-36 course Introduction to Metaphysics was published in 1953, and Wahl gave a course on this this course shortly afterwards.)

Tracking down Wahl’s courses has been a bit of a challenge, since several of the BnF copies are only available to consult on microfiche, and the copy of one later course is missing from the library. (The copies of the ones I tried to order at the Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève all seem to be lost.) The microfiche machines are ancient, and reading a whole course on one is hard work. But there are some real insights into how Foucault and fellow students would have been introduced to Heidegger’s work. At the time there were few translations of Heidegger into French, and only a relatively small amount of his work was published even in German. But Wahl is talking about the later Heidegger as well as Being and Time, and showing the development of his ideas. Holzwege was published in 1950, and Wahl was teaching it almost immediately. And contrary to how some of the later debates about Heidegger and politics have presented things, Wahl and his colleagues were well aware of Heidegger’s Nazism. I also spent a little time on Koyré’s work, since he wrote some important short pieces on Heidegger in the 1930s and 1940s, as well as being an important figure in his own right.

I’ve also been looking again at Foucault’s Maladie mentale et personnalité, and in particular the changes between that 1954 text and the 1962 revision as Maladie mentale et psychologie. Only the second is available in English translation, and it’s the second edition which is in print in French. Although I have copies of all these with me here, I ended up buying a copy of the recent printing of the book in order to mark it up with the changes between editions. James Bernauer has an appendix to his Michel Foucault’s Force of Flightwhich indicates five important passages where there are changes in the first half of the book. But this doesn’t exhaust the changes in that half, and he indicates that the changes in the second half are too extensive to do that kind of analysis. But with pen and highlighter, I’ve been trying to do that work.

I’ve been working through the two editions, line by line, and in so doing spotting lots of little changes that had escaped me before. Essentially, I’m making my own critical edition of the text since that doesn’t exist already – this book wasn’t included in the Pléiade Oeuvres. Although the text was reset for later editions, they made an effort to keep the pagination roughly the same for the first part. After that it gets more complicated. In the second half Foucault removes one 1954 chapter entirely (Chapter VI), and writes a new chapter for the 1962 version (Chapter V). The 1954 Chapter V is used as a resource for the 1962 Chapter VI. This is slow work, but I’m finding it useful. I may share my notes on this at some point, though I’m not sure how useful anyone else would find them. [Update: my detailed notes on this are now available here.] I need to do some similar work with the abridgement of Histoire de la folie and, in time, the two editions of Naissance de la clinique, though the latter will be helped by the critical edition in Oeuvres, as well as Bernauer’s earlier work.

I have a few days at IMEC in Normandy right at the end of my trip, to work on some different archives, but before I head there I’m hoping to have at least an initial look at some materials in Paris relating to Les mots et les choses and L’archéologie du savoir, as I develop plans for a fourth and final book on Foucault in the 1960s. Foucault gave a course on the material in Les mots et les choses in Brazil in the mid-1960s, and so I want to take a look at that, and there is a complete and partial draft of L’archéologie du savoir, some of which has been published already. With these it really will be a case of an initial read, planning a future project, rather than yet doing the hard work of detailed study and note taking.

The previous updates on this project are here; and the previous books Foucault’s Last Decade and Foucault: The Birth of Power are both available from Polity. Canguilhem is forthcoming very soon, and is discussed a bit more here. Several Foucault research resources such as bibliographies, short translations, textual comparisons and so on are available here.

 

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David Macey’s biography, The Lives of Michel Foucault republished by Verso, with a new afterword by Stuart Elden

Macey---Lives-of-Foucault-(dragged)-650f6b95125d9c2c43a563be8ebe9690.jpgDavid Macey’s biography, The Lives of Michel Foucault has now been republished by Verso, with a new afterword by me.

It’s currently available with a 30% discount on the Verso site, with bundled e-book.

When he died of an AIDS-related condition in 1984, Michel Foucault had become the most influential French philosopher since the end of World War II. His powerful studies of the creation of modern medicine, prisons, psychiatry, and other methods of classification have had a lasting impact on philosophers, historians, critics, and novelists the world over. But as public as he was in his militant campaigns on behalf of prisoners, dissidents, and homosexuals, he shrouded his personal life in mystery. In The Lives of Michel Foucault — written with the full cooperation of Daniel Defert, Foucault’s former lover — David Macey gives the richest account to date of Foucault’s life and work, informed as it is by the complex issues arising from his writings. In this new edition, Foucault scholar Stuart Elden has contributed a new afterword assessing the contribution of the biography in the light of more recent literature.

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Le projet archéologique de Michel Foucault (2018-2019)

Seminar series on Foucault in Paris, organised by Orazio Irrera.

Clare O'Farrell's avatarFoucault News

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Andy Merrifield, What We Talk About When We Talk About Cities (And Love)

Now with a link to an open access excerpt

stuartelden's avatarProgressive Geographies

OR Book Going RougeAndy Merrifield, What We Talk About When We Talk About Cities (And Love)– out in June from OR books.

Update: an excerpt is now available open access: Between Utopia and Dystopia: Encountering Marshall Berman and Mike Davis

In often dreamlike peregrinations around his home towns of Liverpool, London and New York Andy Merrifield reflects on what cities mean to us and how they shape the way we think. As he wanders, Merrifield’s reveries circle questions: Can we talk about cities in the absolute, discovering their essence beneath the particulars? Is it possible truly to love or hate a city, to experience it carnally or viscerally? Might we find true love in the city?

Merrifield does find love in the city: with his future wife, whom he takes on a date to see his hero Spalding Gray’s “It’s a Slippery Slope” at London’s South Bank and soon after moves in…

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Andrea Bagnato, Marco Ferrari and Elisa Pasqual, A Moving Border – Alpine Cartographies of Climate Change, Columbia University Press – and o/a link to my piece

a-moving-border_cover_300dpi
Andrea Bagnato, Marco Ferrari and Elisa Pasqual, A Moving Border – Alpine Cartographies of Climate Change, Columbia University Press, forthcoming 2019.

[now updated with the final cover]

This is the book developing from the Italian Limes project. I was pleased to welcome Andrea and Marco to Warwick for one of the ICE-LAW project workshops, and to be asked to write an essay for this book. With their permission, you can access my piece, ‘The Instability of Terrain’, here.

There will be a book launch at the Royal Academy on the evening of 15 April 2019 with some of the contributors. More details when advertised [now available here].

Italy’s northern border follows the watershed that separates the drainage basins of Northern and Southern Europe. Running mostly at high altitudes, it crosses snowfields and perennial glaciers—all of which are now melting as a result of anthropogenic climate change. As the watershed shifts so does the border, contradicting its representations on official maps. Italy, Austria, and Switzerland have consequently introduced the novel legal concept of a “moving border,” one that acknowledges the volatility of geographical features once thought to be stable.

A Moving Border: Alpine Cartographies of Climate Change builds upon the Italian Limes project by Studio Folder, which was devised in 2014 to survey the fluctuations of the boundary line across the Alps in real time. The book charts the effects of climate change on geopolitical understandings of border and the cartographic methods used to represent them. Locating the Italian condition alongside a longer political history of boundary making, the book brings together critical essays, visualizations, and unpublished documents from state archives. By examining the nexus of nationalism and cartography, A Moving Border details how borders are both material and imagined, and the ways global warming challenges Western conceptions of territory. Even more, it provides a blueprint for spatial intervention in a world where ecological processes are bound to dominate geopolitical affairs.

A Moving Border features a foreword by Bruno Latour and texts by Stuart Elden, Mia Fuller, Francesca Hughes, and Wu Ming 1.

Marco Ferrari, an architect, and Elisa Pasqual, a visual designer, are the founders of Studio Folder, a design and research studio based in Milan. Andrea Bagnato is an architect, researcher, and editor.

Update: there is a brief review here

Posted in My Publications, terrain, Territory, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Daniela Vallega-Neu, Heidegger’s Poietic Writings: From Contributions to Philosophy to The Event reviewed at NDPR

9780253033888_medDaniela Vallega-Neu, Heidegger’s Poietic Writings: From Contributions to Philosophy to The Event reviewed at NDPR by Charles E. Scott. Here’s the publisher’s description:

Engaging the development of Heidegger’s non-public writings on the event between 1936 and 1941, Daniela Vallega-Neu reveals what Heidegger’s private writings kept hidden. Vallega-Neu takes readers on a journey through these volumes, which are not philosophical works in the traditional sense as they read more like fragments, collections of notes, reflections, and expositions. In them, Vallega-Neu sees Heidegger searching for a language that does not simply speak about being, but rather allows a sense of being to emerge in his thinking and saying. She focuses on striking shifts in the tone and movement of Heidegger’s thinking during these important years. Skillfully navigating the unorthodox and intimate character of these writings, Vallega-Neu provides critical insights into questions of attunement, language, the body, and historicity in Heidegger’s thinking.

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‘Pushing pennies’ – Rob Kitchin on working on multiple projects

Pushing pennies‘ – an interesting post from Rob Kitchin on working on multiple projects, structured rest and general organisation.

Several times a year I’m asked: ‘how do you get it all done?’, ‘Are there two of you?’, ‘Do you sleep?’ and similar variations concerning productivity.  I always find the questions awkward and embarrassing to answer. In part, because from my perspective I don’t particularly feel overly productive, though I’m fully aware my output profile is different to most. In part, because some of the answers are not really what people want to hear: I think they’d prefer it if I said I worked all-hours and didn’t sleep, whereas I probably work no more hours or maybe less than they do. Anyway, I thought I’d write a post I can refer people to, which elucidates how I work and why I manage to get things done relatively efficiently. They are certainly not my ‘rules’ for others to follow or aspire to, nor an attempt to promote a way of working. They are simply an explanation. They are not in any particular order, though I think the first, second, and the last are key. [continues here]

It’s important to note his disclaimer – both in this opening paragraph, and in the final lines – that this is not a set of rules or guidelines for others, but lots of interesting ideas here.

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