David Harvey Marx & Capital Lecture 1: Capital as Value in Motion

New series of David Harvey lectures.

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David Harvey’s new series of talks on Marx and Capital at CUNY will be available on YouTube. Here is the first lecture, delivered a few weeks ago.

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New open access book reviews for autumn

Open access reviews at the Antipode site.

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We’ve published some great reviews in recent months…

9781137397355.inddColombia has been in the headlines recently, and those following the referendum’s vicissitudes will no doubt find Kate Maclean’s Social Urbanism and the Politics of Violence: The Medellín Miracle (reviewed here by Seth Schindler, University of Sheffield) fascinating.

Vulnerability, Exploitation and MigrantsBoth Jonathan Darling (University of Manchester) and Glenda Garelli (QMUL) take on timely – indeed, urgent – issues of migration, reviewing Antoine Pécoud’s Depoliticising Migration: Global Governance and International Migration Narratives and Louise Waite and colleagues’ Vulnerability, Exploitation, and Migrants: Insecure Work in a Globalised Economy, respectively.

hunger-painsAlso under the spotlight recently have been poverty, “resilience” and austerity – issues anatomised in Emma Bimpson’s (University of Leeds) review of Geoffrey DeVerteuil’s Resilience in the Post-Welfare Inner City: Voluntary Sector Geographies in London, Los Angeles and Sydney, Alison Hulme’s (https://commoditytactics.wordpress.com) of Owen Hatherley’s The Ministry of Nostalgia: Consuming Austerity, and Stephanie Denning’s (University of Bristol) of Kayleigh Garthwaite’s Hunger…

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A new term at Warwick – teaching but also some research

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On Monday a new term at Warwick began. My teaching is blocked into term 1, and most of it is in the first few weeks, so this is a busy time. I’m also heading to California next week for the Early Modern Literary Geographies conference, so I feel if I can make it to the end of October I think I’ve got a good chance to surviving the year… In the weekend before term started I finally got my work office to a well-organised state. We’d moved building when I was on leave, and it wasn’t properly unpacked and sorted – this was partly because I have far too much stuff for the space, so a lot was thrown out, and a lot of things on paper are ready to be scanned to pdf and then recycled.

My teaching this year is in two main areas. I’m co-teaching the doctoral thesis writing course with my colleague George Christou. This is about how to become a successful PhD student, and I’ll be leading discussion sessions on what is expected, the viva, making a contribution, the introduction and literature review, and on reading, taking notes and writing practices. This is new teaching for me, and should be interesting. I’ll also be teaching an MA seminar on ‘Burning Issues: Geopolitics Today’, which I’ve taught twice before. The plan here is that it discusses a number of key themes in political geography and geopolitics, with illustrations from contemporary events. In the past I’ve discussed Ukraine, Israel/Palestine, Ebola, Macau and Hong Kong, Boko Haram, Mali, the US/Mexico border and other issues; this year I’m sure I’ll discuss the UK and the EU, Syria, migration, perhaps Colombia and many of the ongoing themes from previous years. Although I have a framework for each lecture from previous years, I try to update the lecture and finalise it only the day before. I pitch the course along the lines of ‘how does a political geographer read the news’, but I also encourage our international cohort of students to give examples and perspectives. Again, it’s an interesting course to teach.

I really want to keep research going, and writing moving forward, even in the busiest part of the year. To do this, I’m experimenting a bit with time management. No teaching is scheduled before 10am – I teach into the evening for the MA course – so I am trying to ensure I add no other early appointments . The plan is that I get up and get ready for work, but sit at my home study desk for two hours before I go into work. I only live a 15 minute bike ride from campus when in Coventry. I intend to use this time for writing before I even open email. It’s worked well each day this week, and I’ve got the California paper sorted out, answered some questions for an interview on the Foucault books, and begun thinking about the plan for the next lectures. It’s obviously not going to be as productive as the sabbatical year, but some of the same discipline will be applied.

After California, I’ll be giving two talks in London and Cambridge which largely trade on work I’ve previously delivered, so there shouldn’t be much new preparation for either. The first lecture which will require substantial new work is at Justus-Liebig-Universität in Gießen in December. The work for this will feed into a workshop there, and some events in early 2017 – a British Library discussion for their new Maps exhibition; a lecture at the Institute of Advanced Study in Durham; the London Review of International Law lecture; and a trip to the National University of Ireland, Maynooth.

I’ve recently agreed to give talks to the Kingston Shakespeare Seminar at the Rose theatre, and the Centre for Philosophy and Critical Thought at Goldsmiths, University of London early in 2017. The first talk will draw on the Shakespeare manuscript, possibly the chapter on measuring and techniques; and the second will be on Foucault. I’ve got another trip to Paris to work on the Foucault archive in early December, so I may have some new material to discuss there. I’ll see where I am at Christmas.

Posted in Conferences, Foucault's Last Decade, Foucault: The Birth of Power, Michel Foucault, Shakespearean Territories, teaching, terrain, Territory, Travel, Uncategorized, William Shakespeare | 1 Comment

Foucault: Historian or Philosopher? (2016)

This is very good news – Clare O’Farrell’s classic early study of Foucault is to be republished as an ebook.

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Editor: I am delighted to announce that my long out of print 1989 book (originally published with Macmillan) is soon to be republished as an ebook.

Springer is also offering a special offer of 50% off all its Social Sciences, Philosophy, Education & Language ebooks until 17 October 2016,

fhpClare O’Farrell, Foucault: Historian or Philosopher? ebook, Palgrave Macmillan, forthcoming

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Description
The controversial French thinker, Michel Foucault, was famous not only for the variety of his interests but also for his frequent changes of position. Clare O’Farrell, in a lively and lucid account argues that for all this diversity his work was held together by a coherent theme, namely the idea that philosophy should be practised as an historical inquiry into the limits of ordered experience. At the same time, Foucault’s work is situated in its intellectual and social context in France and striking differences between its French- and…

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Camilla Hawthorne and Brittany Meché – Making Room for Black Feminist Praxis in Geography

Third commentary in an ongoing series on Black Lives Matter at the Society and Space open site.

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Jacques Derrida, Heidegger: The Question of Being and History reviewed at NDPR

9780226355115Jacques Derrida’s 1964-65 seminar, Heidegger: The Question of Being and Historyis reviewed at NDPR by Rodolphe Gasché.

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Foucault on the Arts and Letters: Perspectives for the 21st Century (2016)

Foucault on the Arts and Letters – with discount code

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soussloffFoucault on the Arts and Letters – Exclusive 30% pre-order discount

Rowman & Littlefield International is proud to announce the forthcoming publication of Foucault on the Arts and Letters: Perspectives for the 21st Century edited by Catherine M. Soussloff. This book is a collection of new essays addressing Foucault’s thought and its impact on thinking about the visual arts, literature and aesthetic discourse in the 21st century.

As one of the most important philosophers of the 20th century, Michel Foucault’s reputation today rests on his political philosophy in relation to the contemporary subject in a neo-liberal and globalized society. This book offers insight into the role of the arts in Foucault’s thought as a means to better understanding his contribution to larger debates concerning contemporary existence. Visual culture, literary, film and performance studies have all engaged with Foucauldian theories, but a full examination of Foucault’s significance for aesthetic discourse…

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Gatherings: The Heidegger Circle Annual

New issue of Gatherings: The Heidegger Circle Annual available – free to download.

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Books received – Cisney & Morar, Gautam, Ramachandran, Derrida, Burnham, Fink, Greenblatt, Lecavalier

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Mainly from Chicago in recompense for review work, along with two second-hand books (Burnham for teaching, Greenblatt for the Shakespeare project), Jesse Lecavalier, The Rule of Logistics, sent by the publisher, and Eugen Fink, Play as Symbol of the World, to review.

Posted in Jacques Derrida, Martin Heidegger, Michel Foucault, Stephen Greenblatt, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Alistair Fraser on ‘Writing a book’

9781138192485.jpgAt the Maynooth Geography blog, Alistair Fraser reflects on ‘Writing a book‘. He’s just published Global Foodscapes: Oppression and resistance in the life of food, which looks interesting, but the reflections and advice are general and should be useful to many people embarking on or inside a book-length project. In summary: organise, disconnect, stop (or pause), find your voice, be realistic. Well worth a read.

It’s been a while since I’ve done a post on writing, and perhaps I should do something again at some point. My sabbatical year is now at an end, and with it my self-imposed rules, so I will be back to balancing writing with teaching and multiple other tasks.

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