Chris Rumford 1958-2016

ChrisI was very sorry to hear the news of the death of Chris Rumford, Professor of Politics at Royal Holloway, University of London. I didn’t know Chris well, but I knew his work on borders, Europe, globalisation and cosmopolitanism. He invited me to Royal Holloway in 2009 for the Global Studies conference, and we had a good conversation on a range of things, including a shared love of cricket. There is a tribute on the Royal Holloway site. My condolences to his family, friends and colleagues.

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Forthcoming publications and some preprints

I’ve updated the list of forthcoming publications and provided links to some preprints.

For published work, see separate pages for articles and chapters, (some)booksinterviews, and audio and video.

 

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Interview with Jean-Luc Nancy: “There Is No West Anymore” in Huffington Post

2016-07-13-1468418280-8023677-JeanLucNancyfotoachalivianamessina-thumb.jpgInterview with Jean-Luc Nancy: “There Is No West Anymore”. Thanks to dmfant for the link.

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‘Critical Histories of the Present’, Spindel conference, University of Memphis, 16-17 September 2016

SpindelMy next visiting talk – and my first overseas talk in over a year – will be at ‘Critical Histories of the Present‘, the 35th Spindel conference, University of Memphis, 16-17 September 2016.

My talk is under the title of ‘Foucault and Shakespeare: Ceremony, Theatre, Politics’. A very early version was given in London last year. I’ll also be presenting this work to the Political Thought and Intellectual History seminar, University of Cambridge on 7 November 2016. Papers from Memphis will be published in the Southern Journal of Philosophy.

Most discussions of Foucault and Shakespeare are around the theme of madness, which appears in several plays and which Foucault discusses in a number of places. Late in his life he also reads King Lear on the theme of parrēsiaThese are all interesting discussions, and in the (current) written form I work through these references carefully. But my focus is elsewhere, on the scattered thoughts about ceremony and political theatre which Foucault takes from Shakespeare.

The paper begins with an archived page of Foucault’s notes, and discusses the different references to Shakespeare found in Foucault’s lecture courses, where the themes of deposition and ceremony are crucial. It then reads a number of Shakespeare’s plays around the theme of ceremony, and ends with a discussion of Foucault’s 1971-72 lecture course Théories et institutions pénales.

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Time, Temporality and Global Politics – an open access E-IR collection

TTGP_cover_copy.jpgTime, Temporality and Global Politics – an open access E-IR Edited Collection. Now on sale in all good book stores, and also available via free e-book download from the E-International Relations website.

Find out more here
http://www.e-ir.info/publications/

International Relations scholars have traditionally expressed little direct interest in addressing time and temporality. Yet, assumptions about temporality are at the core of many theories of world politics and time is a crucial component of our social reality. Today, a small but emerging strand of literature has emerged to meet questions concerning time and temporality and its relationship to International Relations head on. This edited collection provides a platform to continue this work.

Edited by
Andrew Hom, Christopher McIntosh, Alasdair McKay and Liam Stockdale

Contributors
Shahzad Bashir, Kevin K. Birth, Valerie Bryson, Kathryn Marie Fisher, Robert Hassan, Caroline Holmqvist, Kimberly Hutchings, Tim Luecke, Tom Lundborg, Tim Stevens and Ty Solomon.

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Neil Smith, “The Concepts of Devaluation, Valorization and Depreciation in Marx: Towards a Clarification”

Screenshot 2016-07-08 17.41.43.pngNeil Smith’s essay, “The Concepts of Devaluation, Valorization and Depreciation in Marx: Towards a Clarification”, is published in Human Geography. Don Mitchell provides a great introduction, discussing why the piece was never published in Smith’s lifetime. You can download the paper, open access, here; but do read Don’s intro first.

 

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Gramsci and Foucault in Central Park | New article in Society and Space

Alvaro Sevilla-Buitrago’s new piece on Gramsci and Foucault now available.

asevillab's avatarmultipliciudades

My latest article, ‘Gramsci and Foucault in Central Park: Environmental hegemonies, pedagogical spaces and integral state formations’, is now available online on the early view webpage of Environment and Planning D: Society and Space (requires subscription).

The piece draws on the conceptualizations of power and the state by these authors to develop an explicitly political understanding of landscape struggles and the governmentalization of urban environments, using Manhattan’s Central Park as a historical  illustration of such processes. In fact the article is articulated not only through the dialogue between both thinkers, but as a more open conversation that also includes Frederick Law Olmsted, co-designer, architect-in-chief and superintendent of the park, as well as other figures and institutions related to its material and symbolic construction. The Greensward project and subsequent management of the park premises under Olmsted’s attention are depicted as a pioneering example of how design mediates new local state…

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Latest book reviews in Antipode

Several new reviews at the Antipode website.

Antipode Editorial Office's avatarAntipodeFoundation.org

It’s a typical summer afternoon here in the UK (wet, cold and grey); what could be better than a good book (and cup of tea)?

Clothing PovertyAndrew Brooks’ Clothing Poverty: The Hidden World of Fast Fashion and Second-Hand Clothes reviewed by Alex Loftus, Mike Goodman, Josh Lepawsky and James Sidaway (with a response from the author);

Europe's Border CrisisNick Vaughan-Williams’ Europe’s Border Crisis: Biopolitical Security and Beyond reviewed by Julien Brachet (University of Oxford);

In, Against, and Beyond CapitalismJohn Holloway’s In, Against, and Beyond Capitalism reviewed by Stella Darby (University of Leeds);

Manifesto for Living in the AnthropoceneKatherine Gibson and colleagues’ Manifesto for Living in the Anthropocene reviewed by Harlan Morehouse (University of Vermont);

Food and FemininityKate Cairns and Josée Johnston’s Food and Femininity, Julie Parsons’ Gender, Class and Food and Megan Carney’s The Unending Hunger reviewed by Michael Chrobok (University of Toronto);

WastelandingTraci Brynne Voyles’ Wastelanding: Legacies of Uranium Mining in Navajo Country reviewed by Dawn Hoogeveen (University of British Columbia);

Understanding Southern Social MovementsSimin Fadaee’s Understanding Southern Social Movements

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List of OA journals in geography, political ecology, and various social sciences

Simon Batterbury’s list of OA journals in geography, political ecology, and various social sciences has been updated, and includes some open access book publishers at the foot of the page.

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Bruno Latour interview on India and Gaia-politics

Bruno Latour interview on India and Gaia-politics – thanks to Kai Friese for the link.

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