Christian C. Lentz, Contested Territory: Ðien Biên Phu and the Making of Northwest Vietnam – Yale University Press, 2019

d9842554c4f4b4a69bc895a7d9b3a5d0Christian C. Lentz, Contested Territory: Ðien Biên Phu and the Making of Northwest Vietnam – Yale University Press, 2019

The definitive account of one of the most important battles of the twentieth century, and the Black River borderlands’ transformation into Northwest Vietnam

Historians regard the Battle of Ðien Biên Phu in 1954 as the conflict that toppled the French empire in Indochina and triggered the decline of colonial rule in Southeast Asia. This new work of historical and political geography ventures beyond the conventional framing of Ðien Biên Phu’s history, tracking a longer period of anticolonial revolution and nation-state formation from 1945 to 1960. Examining everyday struggles over agrarian resources such as food, land, and labor, Christian Lentz argues that a Vietnamese elite constructed territory as a strategic form of rule—a product of powerful, ongoing socio-spatial processes. Engaging newly available sources from Vietnam’s National Archives, as well as documents from the French military and other overseas archives, Lentz offers a novel way to conceptualize territory as a contingent outcome of grounded and embodied spatial contests.

“A brilliant, original work that makes a valuable, ground-level contribution to our historical understanding of a major event of the global twentieth century.”—Ben Kiernan, Yale University, author of Vi?t Nam: A History from Earliest Times to the Present
“Emplotting the history of Ði?n Biên Ph? into the story of Vietnam’s multiethnic Northwest, Christian Lentz poses questions about space, power, and territory that will stay with readers long after the final page.”—Bradley Camp Davis, author of Imperial Bandits: Outlaws and Rebels in the China-Vietnam Borderlands
“This masterfully-researched book offers an innovative approach to our understanding of how people and places once considered marginal became integrated into Vietnam’s national project and how its state territory was produced.”—Oscar Salemink, University of Copenhagen
“An extraordinary achievement of historical and political geography as well as agrarian studies”—Emily T. Yeh, author of Taming Tibet: Landscape Transformation and the Gift of Chinese Development
“In this definitive study of Ðiên Biên Phu, Christian Lentz brilliantly illuminates issues of territory and territoriality, processes of nation-building, contests over land and labor, and relations between local peoples and the state.”—Hue-Tam Ho Tai, Harvard University
“Developing theories through the field and archives, Lentz compellingly demonstrates the mutability of territorial arrangements. The emphasis on grounded struggles adds a crucial dimension to the process of making territory.”—Stuart Elden, author of The Birth of Territory 
“At long last, a deep history of Dien Bien Phu that takes us beyond the conventional narratives and hagiographic tropes. Based on exhaustive research and adept deployment of theory, Contested Territory will be required reading for anyone interested in the Vietnamese revolution specifically and the fraught construction of nationalist spaces more widely.”—Lien-Hang Nguyen, Columbia University
“This political ethnography of territory-making on the frontiers of an emergent Vietnam takes us on a front-seat ride through processes of state formation and agrarian transformation.  Set in the decades preceding an iconic war, it contains lessons for scholars of Southeast Asia and beyond.”—Nancy Peluso, Henry J. Vaux Distinguished Professor of Forest Policy, University of California, Berkeley
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‘Foucault before The History of Madness’, Sussex, 7 December 2018

Next Friday at Sussex – more details here http://www.sussex.ac.uk/law/research/groups/critical_theory

The plan is that the talk is recorded and I will share on this blog

stuartelden's avatarProgressive Geographies

Sussex posterI’ll be speaking at the University of Sussex on 7 December 2018 on ‘Foucault before The History of Madness – Lectures, Translations, Nietzsche’. The talk draws on the research i’ve been doing for The Early Foucault. The ‘translations’ are ones made by Foucault and colleagues, not of Foucault.

Before this event I’ll be discussing Foucault: The Birth of Power with a smaller group who have been reading that book.

Thanks to Anna Gumucio Ramberg and Bal Sokhi-Bulley for this invitation.

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Truth, Fiction, Illusion: Worlds and Experience – Association for Philosophy and Literature conference, May 29-June 2 2019 – Mbembe, Stiegler, Elden, Cixous (?)

CFP: Truth, Fiction, Illusion: Worlds and Experience – Association for Philosophy and Literature conference, with Theory, Culture & Society and Alpen-Adria Universität Klagenfurt, Austria, May 29-June 2 2019

Peter Gratton adds that the speakers will include Bernard Stiegler, Achille Mbembe, Stuart Elden and hopefully Hélène Cixous. I’ll be giving a plenary lecture and there will be a discussion session on my work.

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Thanos Zartaloudis, The Birth of Nomos – Edinburgh University Press, November 2018

9781474442008Thanos Zartaloudis, The Birth of Nomos – Edinburgh University Press, 2018

Unfortunately only in an expensive hardback at present, but this looks a major study.

Delves into the history of the ancient Greek word nomos (and related words) to reveal the interdisciplinary depth of this term beyond its later meaning of ‘law’ or ‘law-making’
This is a highly original, interdisciplinary study of the archaic Greek word nomos and its family of words. Thanos Zartaloudis draws out the richness of this fundamental term by exploring its many uses over the centuries.

The Birth of Nomos includes extracts from a wide range of ancient sources, in both the original and English translation, including material from legal history, philosophy, philology, linguistics, ancient history, poetry, archaeology, ancient musicology and anthropology. Through a thorough analysis of these extracts, we gain a new understanding of nomos and its foundational place in the Western legal tradition.

Key Features

Assembles a genealogical history of the ancient Greek work nomos, showing how it contains a richness that is not reflected in its classical and modern usage as simply ‘law’ or ‘law-making’

Draws on works by ancient Greek philosophers, poets and tragedians including Homer, Hesiod, Alcman, Pindar, Archilochos, Theognis, Heraclitus, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides and Plato

Includes extracts from ancient primary sources, in both the original and in English translation, to analyse how nomos has been used in the literary evidence and in context

Considers how nomos has been used by contemporary philosophers, including Agamben, Foucault, Heidegger, Schmitt, Deleuze and Axelos, and re-examines their interpretations

 

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Books received – Bataille, Bousquet, Elders, Barney & Montag (eds.), de Ipola, Venn

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Georges Bataille, Une Liberté Souveraine; Antoine Bousquet, The Eye of War: Military Perception from the Telescope to the Drone; Fons Elders, Reflexive Water; Richard Barney and Warren Montag (eds.), Systems of Life: Biopolitics, Economics and Literature on the Cusp of Modernity; Emilio de Ipola, Althusser: The Infinite Farewell; Couze Venn, After Capital.

The Eye of War and After Capital were sent by the publishers, and Systems of Life was recompense for review work. The others were bought second-hand. Reflexive Water is probably best known for being the original place where the Michel Foucault-Noam Chomsky debate was published, but it also includes an interesting discussion between Henri Lefebvre and Leszek Kolakowski, and ones with Karl Popper and A.J. Ayer, among others.

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CFP: Truth, Fiction, Illusion: Worlds and Experience – APL conference, Klagenfurt, Austria, May 29-June 2 2019

CFP: Truth, Fiction, Illusion: Worlds and Experience – Association for Philosophy and Literature conference, with Theory, Culture & Society and Alpen-Adria Universität Klagenfurt, Austria, May 29-June 2 2019

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Law and Politics in the Anthropocene, Birkbeck, 10 December 2018

Law and Politics in the Anthropocene, Birkbeck, 10 December 2018

Free to attend, but registration required

Speakers: Alain Pottage (LSE) / Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos (University of Westminster) / Daniel Matthews (University of Hong Kong) / Lilian Moncrieff (University of Glasgow) / Mark Maslin (UCL) / Nayanika Mathur (University of Oxford) / Rory Rowan (University of Zurich) / Vito de Lucia (UiT Arctic University of Norway).

Many now claim that we have entered a new climatic regime (the Anthropocene) that marks a transition from the previous geological epoch (the Holocene), a peri- od of 12,000 in which human civilisations emerged. The Anthropocene thesis con- tends that collective human action has become so potent that it is shaping the earth’s systemic functioning. In this way, the Anthropocene reveals a new ontol- ogy or mode of being-in-the-world in which human agency is intimately bound up with the functioning of the earth’s biogeochemical systems and cycles, situating human agency and our political formations within rather than set against the so- called ‘natural environment’. However, within most legal and political thought this ontology remains remarkably difficult to grasp. Throughout modernity legal and political forms have largely been understood to transcend any connection to the inorganic, the non-human or the environmental. The aspirations of human civ- ilisation are commonly thought to depend on the postulation of an anthropogenic superiority in which a ‘natural condition’ (or ‘state of nature’) is overcome in the pursuit of a truly ‘political’ life. The prospect of human survival in this new epoch is bound up with a range of nonhuman forces that our political and legal thought has largely approached as an uninteresting backdrop against which human dra- mas are played out. In the relatively stable conditions of the Holocene this ‘back- drop ontology’ was perhaps understandable. But the Anthropocene tells us that the backdrop is beginning to move, the scenery and props have come to life.

With a focus on questions of method, orientation and encounter, speakers will address the flowing concerns:

    • To what extent do the methodologies which have largely defined modernity – dialectics, historical materialism, genealogy and so on – continue to assists us in the context of the Anthropocene?
    • Towards what ought our thinking on this topic be both temporally and spatiallyorientated: an unjust past or an apocalyptic future; towards Europe or China; the global North or South?
    • What are the fields of law (environmental law, international law, corporate law) and politics (international relations, security studies, biopolitics) that need to be brought into conversation?
    • How can we nurture interdisciplinary literacy across the natural and social sciences, arts and humanities in order to address the challenges that the Anthropocene brings into view?

This event is organised by BIH Visiting Fellow, Dr. Daniel Matthews, and is supported by the Birkbeck Institute for the Humanities and the Birkbeck Centre for Law and the Humanities.

 

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CFP: Violence, Space and the Archives – NUI Galway, 23-24 May 2019

CFP: Violence, Space and the Archives – National University of Ireland, Galway, 23-24 May 2019

We invite paper submissions from across the disciplinary spectrum for a conference on ‘Violence, Space and the Archives’ to examine the challenges and possibilities presented by archival work that interrogates the imbrications of violence and space.

Many research projects concerned with the spatial, contextual, and/or historical specificities of violence involve the assembling of an empirical corpus, however defined, in order to (re)construct moments of struggle and contestation. Archives are often constituted by, and reflect, the concerns of power. The archive is a site of silence as much as a site of statement. Still, archival collections often allow the voices of the dispossessed, the marginal, and those most subject to regimes of power, to speak, albeit often through a narrowed aperture. Along with the strategic concerns of officialdom, the archives may also give voice to alternative political desires and ambitions, revealed through moments of contestation and resistance. As a political technology, archives render the state’s claimed spaces visible and orderable through cataloguing, but may also underline the contingency of dominant configurations of power by revealing sites of refusal. Of course, ’the archive’ is not limited to institutional and official repositories, but also to a shared fidelity to unofficial and counter-hegemonic memories that refuse to be forgotten.

We invite 20 minute papers that explore some of the following non-exhaustive list of themes:

•     The silence of the archive

•     Political desires/spatial imaginaries

•     Making contested space/ rebel space/ oppositional space visible

•     Contentious episodes and the archive

•     Histories/genealogies of thought as archive

•     Collective memory and resistance

•     Humanitarian archives and histories of violence

•     Archiving in times of conflict

•     Conflict and digital archives

Send abstracts of 250-300 words, along with name and affiliation and a short bio (100 words) to violenceandspace@gmail.com by 21st January 2019

The conference takes place in NUI Galway and is organised by the Whitaker Institute’s Research Cluster on Conflict, Humanitarianism and Security in association with the Moore Institute, the School of Political Science & Sociology and the Peace and Conflict Specialist Group of the Political Studies Association of Ireland. It builds on the success of the 2018 Conference on Violence, Space, and the Political.

Organisers: Gary Hussey and Niall Ó Dochartaigh, School of Political Science and Sociology, NUI Galway

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Advance copy of Shakespearean Territories (University of Chicago Press, 2018) received

STsI’ve just received an advance copy of Shakespearean Territories (University of Chicago Press, 2018). The book has been a long time in production, and the final stages were delayed by paper shortages and printer problems in the US. I’ve been told that warehouse copies will follow, which usually the sign for when the book is more generally available from other sellers.

Shakespeare was an astute observer of contemporary life, culture, and politics. The emerging practice of territory as a political concept and technology did not elude his attention. In Shakespearean Territories, Stuart Elden reveals just how much Shakespeare’s unique historical position and political understanding can teach us about territory. Shakespeare dramatized a world of technological advances in measuring, navigation, cartography, and surveying, and his plays open up important ways of thinking about strategy, economy, the law, and colonialism, providing critical insight into a significant juncture in history. Shakespeare’s plays explore many territorial themes: from the division of the kingdom in King Lear, to the relations among Denmark, Norway, and Poland in Hamlet,  to questions of disputed land and the politics of banishment in Richard II. Elden traces how Shakespeare developed a nuanced understanding of the complicated concept and practice of territory and, more broadly, the political-geographical relations between people, power, and place. A meticulously researched study of over a dozen classic plays, Shakespearean Territories will provide new insights for geographers, political theorists, and Shakespearean scholars alike.

Jeff Malpas, University of Tasmania
Shakespearean Territories is a truly groundbreaking volume that enriches our reading of Shakespeare at the same time as it illuminates our understanding of the nature and history of territory. An insightful and engrossing work, Shakespearean Territories demonstrates Elden’s unquestionable position as the most significant thinker of territory and the geographic working today—and in relation to the literary and dramatic no less than the political.”
Alexander Murphy, University of Oregon
“A work of meticulous scholarship, Shakespearean Territories teases out and explains a wide range of geographical themes present in Shakespeare’s plays with finesse and profound interpretation. Beyond the specific insights he offers on territory and geography as refracted through Shakespeare’s plays, Elden displays the substantial value of bridging literary and historical-geographical analysis.”
Garrett Sullivan, Penn State University
Shakespearean Territories offers illuminating analyses of Shakespeare’s works that are immersed in relevant scholarship on the colonial, geophysical, and corporeal aspects of territory. This is a fascinating textual analysis that builds upon the concept of territory with Elden’s characteristic nuance and depth.”
Contents

Introduction: Shakespearean Territories
Chapter 1: Divided Territory: The Geo-politics of King Lear
Chapter 2: Vulnerable Territories: Regional Geopolitics in Hamlet and Macbeth
Chapter 3: The Territories: Majesty and Possession in King John
Chapter 4: Economic Territories: Laws, Economies, Agriculture, and Banishment in Richard II
Chapter 5: Legal Territories: Conquest and Contest in Henry V and Edward III
Chapter 6: Colonial Territories: From The Tempest to the Eastern Mediterranean
Chapter 7: Measuring Territories: The Techniques of Rule
Chapter 8: Corporeal Territories: The Political Bodies of Coriolanus
Chapter 9: Outside Territory: The Forest in Titus Andronicus and As You Like It
Coda: Beyond Pale Territories

References to Shakespeare’s Plays
Notes

 

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Tiago Santos Almeida, Canguilhem e a gênese do possível – Editora LiberArs 2018

canguilhem e a genese do possivel_capa.jpgTiago Santos Almeida, Canguilhem e a gênese do possível: Estudio sobre a historicização das ciências [Canguilhem and the genesis of the possible. A study on the historicization of sciences] – Editora LiberArs 2018

Tiago tells me that the Table of contents, Preface and Introduction are on Academia.edu, and that

The book will be released november 30, during the “6th Colloquium on History and Philosophy of Science: the Human Sciences”. I also attached the program. The colloquium will take place at the History Department of the Federal University of Goiás, Brazil.
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