Review of Robert E. Lerner, Ernst Kantorowicz: A Life at Berfrois

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Update September 2025: the Berfrois site is now closed and the archive has been removed. My piece can now be found here.

My review of Robert E. Lerner, Ernst Kantorowicz: A Life has just appeared at Berfrois.

Beyond the ranks of medievalists, Ernst Kantorowicz (1895-1963) is largely known for his magisterial 1957 book The King’s Two Bodies: A Study in Medieval Political Theology. Praised by Michel Foucault in Discipline and Punish, and a reference point for Giorgio Agamben, The King’s Two Bodies is almost certainly a book now more cited than read. Yet Kantorowicz was the author of other important books, as well as several articles and chapters, some of which were collected in the posthumous Selected Studies in 1965. In 1927, he had published a major German-language biography of the Holy Roman Emperor Friedrich II, an immense though very readable study which was roundly criticised by more traditional historians. Not to be put off, Kantorowicz followed it with a second volume in 1931 proving sources and further readings, as impressive in its ostentatious erudition as the first volume had been in its accessibility. In 1946, after delays in press due in part to the war, he published a study in English entitled Laudes Regiae: A Study of Liturgical Acclamations and Medieval Ruler Worship. In October 1950, for reasons to be discussed, he self-funded the publication of a pamphlet The Fundamental Issue: Documents and Marginal Notes on the University of California Loyalty OathThe King’s Two Bodies was a late work, much delayed, which appeared only a few years before his death. He never wrote, nor even began, another book. Of these works, only The King’s Two Bodies remains in print in English, despite the 1931 translation of Fredrick the Second and the other books being written in that language. [continues here]

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The Early Foucault update 4: Merleau-Ponty, Canguilhem, a week in the archive and a book contract…

ms pages.jpegThe past few weeks have felt like I am running a few different research careers in parallel, with ongoing things around Lefebvre, Shakespeare and the terrain work. This has meant dealing with publishers, grant bodies, and writing projects, as well as giving a talk at the British Library on the theme of power, territory and borders; and a public lecture at Durham on the terrain project. The next talk on terrain will be the London Review of International Law annual lecture on Thursday – February 23rd.

Nonetheless, as time has allowed, I’ve also done some work on Foucault, including beginning work with some of Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s lecture courses at the Sorbonne, which we know that Foucault attended. While based on student notes, they were initially edited by Merleau-Ponty himself. There are now multiple editions of these lectures, individually or collectively, in French, and English translations of several individually. These initially confused me as to what was what, and why there were duplicate courses and translations published. The definition edition is Psychologie et pédagogie de l’enfant: Cours de Sorbonne 1949-1952; translated as Child Psychology and Pedagogy: The Sorbonne Lectures 1949-1952. There are also some other lectures from Lyon and some radio addresses from around this time, which I’ve also been looking at. Once Merleau-Ponty takes up his chair at the Collège de France in 1952, I’m less sure that Foucault followed his courses. Once Foucault goes to Sweden it’s unlikely (though he was regularly back in Paris), and Merleau-Ponty dies in 1961, just before Foucault defends his thesis. But I think that digging into Merleau-Ponty’s work will be useful – there is one early work which looks very important.

I also have been doing some further reading of Georges Canguilhem’s work, which I knew in part before, and some of Georges Dumézil’s writings, which I knew less about. Both of these are writers who Foucault said were important to his early work. Canguilhem has proved to be especially interesting and time consuming, and while I had some of his works in English and French already, I’ve begun building up a more complete collection. I’m especially interested in the project of his Oeuvres complètes, of which two volumes are currently published.

Last week was reading week at Warwick, so I’ve also been back in Paris to do some more work with the manuscripts at the Bibliothèque Nationale. This visit I spent some time with boxes of material relating directly to the 1950s, at the Richelieu site. I found a lot of surprises in these, though as ever the cataloguing is a bit erratic and things are rather jumbled. There are materials which clearly relate to much later concerns in here or, at least, material which informed later concerns. As I’ve said before, Foucault doesn’t date his notes, so it’s really hard to be certain about anything. But there are multiple clues to organization, from handwriting to type of paper, to the scrap paper he used, especially to group notes. There are notes taken in lectures mixed up with reading notes. Some of my favourite finds included lots of early notes on sexuality; loads of material on theatre and literature, including on Roussel and Flaubert; an almost complete typescript of the introduction to Kant’s Anthropology, tonnes of notes on Husserl; and what I was expecting to find – the extensive notes on Binswanger and other psychiatry. These were very detailed, and his reading really was wide-ranging. As well as the Binswanger introduction, Maladie mentale et personnalité and some short texts, we know that Foucault lectured on psychology at Lille and at the ENS. Lots of useful leads here for the research I’m doing.

If and when I eventually get to working on The Order of Things and The Archaeology of Knowledge, I’ll be sure to return to the references here, because Foucault read very extensively in analytic philosophy, literary theory, history of science, history of ideas and so on. As ever, I took extensive notes – over 16,000 words in four days. Often this was just building up a detailed inventory of what was here. I didn’t quite finish the boxes I’d ordered – two of them were divided into ‘a’ and ‘b’ boxes, so there was a lot more material than I expected. Once the archive closed I also made a couple of short evening visits to the Mitterand site to look at some Canguilhem texts which are hard to find in London, and of course did my usual tour of favourite bookshops. On the trip, I also read and wrote a review of Robert E. Lerner’s excellent Ernst Kantorowicz: A Life, which should be published very shortly.

My research on the early Foucault was presented to an audience for the first time when I gave a talk at the Institute of Historical Research in London, to their Philosophy of History seminar. The first half discussed Foucault’s Last Decade and Foucault: The Birth of Power and the general approach I’ve been taking to this work – textual, contextual, archival. The second half outlined some of the themes and questions I’m trying to examine with the early period. Much of this was, at this stage, necessarily provisional and more of a survey of issues rather than a thorough treatment, but I said something about Foucault’s role in the translations of Ludwig Binswanger and Viktor von Weizsäcker. I did record the talk and will likely share it at some point, but I plan to give versions of this at other places so it might be a little while before I do. I’ll next be speaking about this work at Goldsmiths University of 10 March.

On my final day in the archive I received two reader reports on The Early Foucault proposal. These were extremely generous and supportive, and just yesterday the book was given the green light by Polity. So this project is now very much under way…

 

The previous updates on this project are here; and Foucault’s Last Decade and Foucault: The Birth of Power are now both available from Polity. Several Foucault research resources such as bibliographies, short translations, textual comparisons and so on are available here.

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Visiting scholar, ACCESS Europe, University of Amsterdam

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I’ll be spending several weeks between April and June 2017 as a visiting scholar at ACCESS Europe at the University of Amsterdam. ACCESS is the Amsterdam Centre for Contemporary European Studies.

While there I will be giving a public lecture, leading a PhD reading seminar on urban territory, and we will host the first workshop of the Territory sub theme of the ICE-LAW project. More details on the lecture and workshop soon.

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Critique n° 835 : Michel Foucault – including a previously unpublished lecture by Foucault

Critique n° 835 is a theme issue entitled ‘Michel Foucault. Un très beau feu d’artifice‘.

livre_galerie_9782707343314Perhaps the key piece of interest is a previously unpublished lecture by Foucault, ‘La littérature et la folie’, edited from the manuscript at the Bibliothèque Nationale.

Michel FOUCAULT : La littérature et la folie
Laurent JENNY : Foucault et la littérature. Une passante
Michel Foucault, La Grande Étrangère. À propos de la littérature
Œuvres
« Homère, les récits, l’éducation, les discours »

Pedro CORDOBA : Le Mardi gras de la folie

Jean-François Bert et Elisabetta Basso (éd.), Foucault à Münsterlingen. À l’origine de l’Histoire de la folie

Judith REVEL : Foucault, « signe d’un nom propre » ?
Michel Foucault, Œuvres

Martin RUEFF et Frédéric GROS : « L’œuvre, cet îlot, fragile mais tenace »
Entretien réalisé par Françoise BALIBAR, Marielle MACÉ et Philippe ROGER

Martin RUEFF : De Benjamin à Foucault. Allumer la mèche

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The Revolutionary Imperative: Engaging the Work of Neil Smith

Antipode special supplement on the work of Neil Smith – open access online and in paperback.

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neilsmith_antipodeAntipode has published a special supplement dedicated to the late Neil Smith, available open access from the journal’s parallel site and also in paperback edition. In line with Smith’s broad interests the materials explore a wide range of substantive issues and include fundamental analyses to understand the evolution, impact and future potentialities of his work. Besides the strictly theoretical and political aspects, some of the pieces contextualize Smith’s contributions from a more personal perspective, for instance his relation with Harvey or his work with and influence on students. Some of the chapters overlap with the collection that Icaria will publish in Spanish soon.

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10 Talking Points towards a general theory of Trump – Progress in Political Economy

10 Talking Points towards a general theory of Trump – Progress in Political Economy

On Monday 6 February 2017, the Department of Political Economy at the University of Sydney convened a postgraduate workshop with Paul Mason – British journalist, broadcaster, and author of Postcapitalism: A Guide to Our FutureThe workshop was titled ‘Towards A General Theory of Trump’, and the lively and critical debates therein focused on various questions thrown up by the ascension of Trump to the Oval Office. To provoke further discussion and reflection on these critical questions, we are publishing ten talking points from the workshop’s participants, which are grouped thematically. A response by Paul Mason will soon follow.

 

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Christopher Watkins on research strategies and writing

From Christopher Watkins – a series of useful posts on research strategies and writing, designed for undergraduate, Masters and PhD students, but likely to be of interest beyond that too.

In this series I share some of the research hacks I have picked up and developed over my years of academic research, undergraduate and postgraduate teaching.

Research Hacks #1: Research Audit

For students who want to work faster, smarter and more effectively

Research Hacks #2: Three important questions to ask before you choose a new research project

For students who want to work faster, smarter and more effectively

Research Hacks #3: Help! I can’t settle on a research project

For students who want to work faster, smarter and more effectively

There are several posts from Progressive Geographies about writing and publishing, and a lot more links, archived here.

Update: Chris’s fourth Research Hack is available here; the fifth here; and the sixth here. The rest are available here.

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Complicités et ambivalences de la psychiatrie, Münsterlingen et le carnaval des fous de 1954 (2017)

Elisabetta Basso is one of the key scholars of the very early Foucault, so this should be good. There was a very interesting documentary study of this visit that she co-edited a couple of years ago – http://editions.ehess.fr/ouvrages/ouvrage/foucault-a-muensterlingen/

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Elisabetta Basso, Complicités et ambivalences de la psychiatrie, Münsterlingen et le carnaval des fous de 1954, Médecine/Sciences (Paris), Volume 33, Number 1, Janvier 2017
DOI: 10.1051/medsci/20173301019

Complicities and ambivalences of psychiatry: Münsterlingen and the 1954 feast of fools

Résumé
En mars 1954, Michel Foucault visite l’asile de Münsterlingen, dans le canton de Thurgovie, sur la rive suisse du lac de Constance. Lieu d’activité de psychiatres bien connus, notamment Hermann Rorschach, Münsterlingen est devenu célèbre dans l’histoire de la psychiatrie surtout grâce au travail de Roland Kuhn, qui fut actif à l’asile de 1939 à 1979. Grand spécialiste du test psychodiagnostique de Rorschach et découvreur au début des années 1950 du premier médicament antidépresseur, Kuhn fut également très proche de Ludwig Binswanger, dont il accueille favorablement l’approche anthropologique de la maladie mentale. C’est précisément pour rencontrer Kuhn et Binswanger que le jeune Foucault se rend en Suisse, à une époque où…

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Editorial from the relaunched Environment & Planning B: Urban Analytics & City Science

After Environment and Planning C’s relaunch as Politics and Space, now Environment and Planning B has a new subtitle. Read Mike Batty’s editorial on the change here.

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The right to have visiting rights- Seyla Benhabib and her visit to the UK

The right to have visiting rights– The story of Seyla Benhabib and her visit to the UK.

There’s a small but telling irony behind an important lecture at Cambridge tomorrow evening (Monday, 13 February) on migrants, refugees, and “the right to have rights.” The lecturer, the Yale political philosopher Seyla Benhabib, a visiting professor this term at the university’s Centre for Gender Studies, has lectured in England several times before. In 2002 she delivered Cambridge’s Seeley Lectures on the theme, “Citizens, Residents, and Aliens.”

Yet, this year, the British consulate in New York, operating under rules instituted by former Home Secretary Theresa May, made Benhabib’s visa-application process so Kafkaesque and expensive that the process  succeeded in making the United Kingdom look like a failed state fronting for a band of mercenaries.

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