8 Critical Theory books that came out in August 2016

Another useful roundup from critical-theoryaugust-2016-critical-theory-books-672x372.png

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Books received – Krell, Whyte, Minca & Giacarra, Bouzarovski

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Two books from SUNY Press in recompense for review work, the edited collection Hitler’s Geographies (in which I have a piece reprinted), Stefan Bouzarovski’s Retrofitting the City, sent by the publisher, and the most recent issues of Area, Radical Philosophy and Annals of the AAG.

Posted in David Farrell Krell, Giorgio Agamben, Martin Heidegger, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Verso e-book sale – 90% off – and my five picks

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Verso have a massive e-book sale with 90% off a huge range of their books until the end of today (Friday 2 September 2016). You could pick up the new translation of Henri Lefebvre’s Metaphilosophy for just £2, and all three volumes of the Critique of Everyday Life for £2.50.

Verso asked me to come up with my five picks from the list. This is hard because there is a lot of choice, and also because I have so many already… But here are the five I’ve just bought.

Posted in Henri Lefebvre, Raymond Williams, Uncategorized, Walter Benjamin | 2 Comments

Shakespeare productions in London and Stratford (late 2016-early 2017)

An updated list of some of the productions I’m looking forward to seeing over the next few months…

The Two Noble Kinsmen at the RSC.

Cymbeline ‘reclaimed and renamed’ as Imogen at the Globe

King Lear – Antony Sher at the RSC and Glenda Jackson at the Old Vic

Two Gentlemen of Verona at the Globe.

The Tempest, Henry IV and Julius Caesar – all-female casts at the Donmar King’s Cross

Simon Russell Beale as Prospero in The Tempest at the RSC

Othello in the indoor theatre at the Globe in early 2017.

Ivo van Hove’s Roman Tragedies – Coriolanus, Julius Caesar, and Anthony and Cleopatra in a six hour epic in Dutch at the Barbican in 2017; and hopefully Hamlet at the Almeida.

What have I missed? Time-Out has a useful, though frequently incomplete, list here.

Posted in Shakespearean Territories, Uncategorized, William Shakespeare | 1 Comment

Foucault: The Birth of Power cover and description (forthcoming early 2017)

FBP cover.jpgHere is the cover for Foucault: The Birth of Power. The book is forthcoming in early 2017 with Polity, and the design fits with Foucault’s Last Decade which came out earlier this year. There is a lot about Foucault’s political activism in this second book, so the covers make a nice contrasting pair. More information on the two books here.

Michel Foucault’s The Archaeology of Knowledge was published in March 1969; Discipline and Punish in February 1975. Although only separated in time by six years, the difference in tone is stark: the former is a methodological treatise, the latter a call to arms. What accounts for the radical shift in Foucault s approach?

Several transitions took place during this period. Foucault returned to France from Tunisia, first to the experimental University of Vincennes and then to a prestigious chair at the Collège de France. Tunisia was a political awakening for him, and he returned to a France much changed by the turmoil of 1968. He quickly became involved in activist work, particularly concerning prisons but also around health issues such as abortion rights, and in his seminars he built research teams to conduct collaborative work, often around issues related to his lectures and activism.

Foucault: The Birth of Power makes use of his Collège de France courses, newly available documents at the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, as well as archival material relating to his activism and collaborative research, to provide a detailed intellectual history of Foucault as writer, researcher, lecturer and activist. Through a careful reconstruction of Foucault s work and preoccupations, Elden shows that, while Discipline and Punish may be the major published output of this period, it rests on a much wider range of concerns and projects. This is an essential companion to Foucault’s Last Decade (Polity, 2016).

Posted in Foucault's Last Decade, Foucault: The Birth of Power, Jean-Paul Sartre, Michel Foucault | 2 Comments

Stephen Graham, Vertical – forthcoming with Verso/Penguin

Stephen Graham’s Vertical_Cover-new book, Vertical: The City from Sateillites to Bunkers, is forthcoming with Verso/Penguin-Random House.

From the penthouse to the sewers—the political geography of the vertical city

Vertical is a brilliant re-imagining of the world we live in. Today we live in a world that can no longer be read as a two-dimensional map. In Vertical Stephen Graham rewrites the city at every level, calling for a new understanding of our surroundings that takes into account above and below: why Dubai has been built to be seen from GoogleEarth; how the superrich in Sao Paulo live their penthouse lives far from the street; why London billionaires build vast subterranean basements rather than move house. Vertical will make you look at the city anew: from the viewfinders of drones, satellites, from the top of skyscrapers, at street-level and from underground bunkers: this is a new politics of space and geography.

Posted in Stephen Graham, urban/urbanisation | 1 Comment

Seven Things Every Scholarly Publisher Should Know about Researchers

Some interesting reflections on what publishers should know about academics – a reversal of the more-common advice about what academics should know.

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Radical Philosophy 200 to be the final issue of current print edition of the journal

The end of an era – from the Radical Philosophy website.

Radical Philosophy 200 (November/December 2016) will be the final issue of the current print edition of the journal.

Plans are under way to relaunch Radical Philosophy in a new form in 2017. Please keep an eye out for announcements on our website in the new year.

All subscribers whose subscriptions end with RP 199 will receive RP 200 free of charge. All subscribers with issues outstanding on their subscriptions after issue 200 will continue to have free access to the entire archive, and free downloads, throughout 2017, while the new project is being finalized. Any subscribers who would prefer to receive a refund for issues remaining on their subs (thereby giving up continuing free archive access and free downloads) should write to subs@radicalphilosophy.com

All current and recent subscribers will receive details of the new Radical Philosophy as soon as they are available.

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Deleuze seminars to be translated by Daniel Smith

Deleuze seminars to be translated by Daniel Smith. Full report here (via Graham Harman).

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — A Purdue University professor of philosophy has a received $175,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to translate the seminar lectures of a noted French philosopher and make them available online.

Daniel Smith, a professor of philosophy, is focusing on the work of Gilles Deleuze, who lived 1925-95. He authored more than 25 books and taught for many years at the University of Paris 8.

“Deleuze is widely recognized as one of the most influential and important French philosophers of the second half of the 20th century,” Smith said. “He is one of the most cited authors in the humanities, and several of his books, such as ‘Nietzsche and Philosophy’ and ‘Difference and Repetition,’ have become classics in their fields.”

Smith and his team will translate several of the seminar lectures that Deleuze gave at the University of Paris 8 from 1979-87. Large crowds attended the seminars, and students’ recordings of his lectures were eventually archived by the National Library of France.

“The translations will be a great benefit to English-speaking scholars in the humanities,” Smith said. “Since there is much material in the lectures that finds no parallel in Deleuze’s published works.”

Posted in Gilles Deleuze, Uncategorized | 3 Comments

Martin Heidegger, The History of Beyng reviewed at NDPR

9780253018144_med.jpgMartin Heidegger, The History of Beyng is reviewed at NDPR by Mark Wrathall. Here’s the first paragraph:

This volume — a new translation of volume 69 of the Gesamtausgabe or “Complete Edition” of Heidegger’s work — consists of two distinct parts: the manuscript of an incomplete and unpublished treatise on “The History of Beyng,” and the manuscript of a short (but, to all appearances, more complete) unpublished treatise entitled “Κοινόν: Out of the History of Beyng.” The two manuscripts, composed between 1938 and 1940, are closely related in terms of thematic content. In these manuscripts, we get an intimate glimpse into the development of Heidegger’s account of the history of metaphysics by bringing it to bear on contemporary events. The historical phenomena that form the particular focus of Heidegger’s analysis include the outbreak of the Second World War and the rise of Communism. By interrogating the ontological background of such world-historical events, Heidegger arrives at an intriguing account of the nature of power in the twentieth century.

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