Farge and Foucault, Disorderly Families – forthcoming with University of Minnesota Press

image_miniArlette Farge and Michel Foucault, Disorderly Families: Infamous Letters from the Bastille Archives, forthcoming with University of Minnesota Press, edited by Nancy Luxon and translated by Thomas Scott-Railton. The UMP page says January 2017; Amazon suggests November 2016. There will be a companion book of essays, entitled Archives of Infamy, also edited by Nancy Luxon – more details when available.

Drunken and debauched husbands; libertine wives; vagabonding children. These and many more are the subjects of requests for confinement written to the king of France in the eighteenth century. These letters of arrest (lettres de cachet) from France’s Ancien Régime were often associated with excessive royal power and seen as a way for the king to imprison political opponents. In Disorderly Families, first published in French in 1982, Arlette Farge and Michel Foucault collect ninety-four letters from ordinary families who, with the help of hired scribes, submitted complaints to the king to intervene and resolve their family disputes.

Gathered together, these letters show something other than the exercise of arbitrary royal power, and offer unusual insight into the infamies of daily life. From these letters come stories of divorce and marital conflict, sexual waywardness, reckless extravagance, and abandonment. The letters evoke a fluid social space in which life in the home and on the street was regulated by the rhythms of relations between husbands and wives, or parents and children. Most impressively, these letters outline how ordinary people seized the mechanisms of power to address the king and make demands in the name of an emerging civil order.

Arlette Farge and Michel Foucault were fascinated by the letters’ explosive qualities and by how they both illustrated and intervened in the workings of power and governmentality. Disorderly Families sheds light on Foucault’s conception of political agency and his commitment to theorizing how ordinary lives come to be touched by power. This first English translation is complete with an introduction from the book’s editor, Nancy Luxon, as well as notes that contextualize the original 1982 publication and eighteenth-century policing practices.

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CHE Article on Journal Editors and Their Work

Peter Gratton links to a good piece on how journal editors work

Peter Gratton's avatarPHILOSOPHY IN A TIME OF ERROR

Most of this offers good advice (h/t Christina Daigle on FB): don’t have titles that are too punny or silly, really pay attention to your abstract and first couple of pages, realize if you cite someone and we editors need ideas for reviewers, they might be used first, etc. But I would say the first rule is to read the darn journal before submitting–it’s amazing how many desk rejects are just simply because it’s not a fit for what the journal publishes. This below is a bit strong:

Do not — repeat, do not — complain to the editor about the reader reports you receive. (Find a friend, a mentor, or a therapist for that.)

Don’t complain, but you can defend your work without being defensive: give an argument (we try, but don’t always screen well bad reports), but don’t pretend editors won’t roll their eyes when you suggest…

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Critical Theory’s roundup of eight books that came out in June

Critical Theory’s roundup of eight books that came out in June

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Michael Gove, foreign policy and the Henry Jackson society

In 2008, Klaus Dodds and I published an article entitled ‘Thinking Ahead: David Cameron, the Henry Jackson Society and British Neo-conservatism‘ in the British Journal of Politics and International Relations (requires subscription, or available here). We wrote the piece in 2007, around the time that Gordon Brown became prime minister, when Cameron was the relatively new leader of the Conservative Party. Here’s the abstract:

The Conservative party under David Cameron’s leadership has embarked on a series of foreign policy initiatives which appear to revise the political right’s traditional reluctance to interfere in third-party conflicts with no obvious British interest. This article looks at whether this shift is substantial through an examination of Cameron’s and William Hague’s foreign policy pronouncements. Its particular focus is to discuss whether the Henry Jackson Society, a group of academics, parliamentarians and journalists, is exercising any influence over Conservative party foreign policy discussion. Finally, we consider how critics including individuals associated with the Henry Jackson Society have evaluated Cameron’s and Hague’s tentative interventionist convictions. It is suggested that the notion that idealism in foreign policy has to be conditioned by realism is actually a reworking of Blair’s foreign policy, especially when applied to overseas intervention.

isbn9781780229249The reason I highlight this piece now is that one of the key voices in the early days of the Henry Jackson Society was Michael Gove, then a relatively new MP and advisor to Cameron, and now one of the candidates for Conservative party leader and prime minister. (Gisela Stuart, one of the key Labour voices for the ‘Leave’ campaign, was also a signatory of their founding statement of principles). Gove got quite a lot of attention in our article, not just because of his role in the society, but also because of his book Celsius 7/7, which looked at the 2005 London bombs and wider issues in the war on terror. Gove’s cabinet experience has been in Education and Justice (though he has some strange ideas about the nouns those ministries are concerned with). His foreign policy views have, of late, been largely confined to Europe. But it is worth reconsidering the kind of views he has on wider issues.

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Welcome to the Anthropocene – Video of debate with Peter Sloterdijk and Bernard Stiegler

Welcome to the Anthropocene – Video of debate with Peter Sloterdijk and Bernard Stiegler (via Philippe Theophanidis)

We no longer live in the Holocene. Welcome to the Anthropocene! For the first time in history it is not nature but man that is the biggest geological force.

Since the industrial revolution earth has entered new territory. By digging up and using large amounts of oil and coals, among others, technology has taken flight. But this has brought us more than progress alone. While climate change persists and plastic waste is accumulating, the consequences for our planet are only now beginning to dawn on us.

What does it mean to live in the Anthropocene? What will this man-made geological era bring us? What problems will we face? And how will we solve them?

These big questions will be discussed by two great thinkers: the German philosopher Peter Sloterdijk and the French philosopher Bernard Stiegler. What is their diagnosis of our current anthropological condition? And what are their speculations for a future of an increasingly globalizing and industrializing humanity on a finite and fragile planet?

Programmer and philosopher Lisa Doeland chairs the debate.

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Theory, Culture & Society E-Special Issue on John Urry

Urry-coverThe Theory, Culture & Society E-Special Issue on John Urry, edited and introduced by Mimi Sheller, is now available.

This e-special issue of Theory, Culture & Society presents key works published by the late British Sociologist John Urry (1946-2016) in the journals Theory, Culture & Society and Body & Society. It serves both to commemorate and to continue Urry’s profound contributions as a social theorist, as a network builder, and as a public intellectual who changed the face of British, and indeed global, social science. The selections range from 1982 to 2014, including articles and introductions to collections, both sole-authored and collaborative pieces. By gathering this portion of his work in one place we seek to make it easily accessible, as well as marking the signal importance of his impact on contemporary social theory.

Table of Contents

Complexity and Social Science

John Urry
Duality of Structure: Some Critical Issues
Theory, Culture & Society, 1982, vol. 1 (2): 100-106Scott Lash And John Urry
Economies of Signs and Spaces
1994John Urry
The Global Complexities of September 11th
Theory, Culture & Society, 2002, vol. 19 (4): 57-69John Urry
The Complexity Turn
Theory, Culture & Society, 2005, vol. 22 (5): 1-14John Urry
The Complexities of the Global 
Theory, Culture & Society, 2005, vol. 22 (5): 235-254


Mobilities, Climate Change and Carbon Capitalism

Mimi Sheller and John Urry
Mobile Transformations of `Public’ and `Private’ Life
Theory, Culture & Society, 2003, vol. 20 (3): 107-125John Urry
The ‘System’ of Automobility
Theory, Culture & Society, 2004, vol. 21 (4-5): 25-39Bronislaw Szerszynski and John Urry
Changing Climates: Introduction
Theory, Culture & Society, 2010, vol. 27 (2-3): 1-8John Urry
Consuming the Planet to Excess
Theory, Culture & Society, 2010, vol. 27 (2-3): 191-212John Urry
The Problem of Energy
Theory, Culture & Society, 2014, vol. 31 (5): 3-20


Tourism, Bodies and Nature

John Urry
Cultural Change and Contemporary Holiday-Making
Theory, Culture & Society, 1988; vol. 5 (1): 35-55John Urry
The Tourist Gaze and the `Environment’
Theory, Culture & Society, 1992,vol. 9 (3): 1-26Phil Macnaghten And John Urry
Contested Natures
1998John Urry And Jonas Larsen
The Tourist Gaze
3.0, 2012Phil Macnaghten And John Urry
Bodies of Nature: Introduction
Body & Society, 2000, vol. 6 (3-4): 1-11

 

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Article in India Today on ‘The legacies of the Leave EU vote’

CmQVhMUVYAAnCAf.jpgI have a short piece in the new issue of India Today on ‘The legacies of the Leave EU vote’. The piece is available open access.

I was asked to write about this for an international audience, so for UK or other European readers some of the discussion is likely to be quite familiar. Given the fast-moving nature of events, it is hard not to be overtaken by the news – notably it was written before Boris Johnson said he would not run.

Perhaps the distinctive contribution is that I begin thinking about the territorial and boundary implications of this vote. That is a topic which I may explore in future academic work.

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Agamben’s Philosophical Lineage – forthcoming with Edinburgh University Press

Agamben’s Philosophical Lineage, edited by Adam Kotsko and Carlo Salzani – forthcoming with Edinburgh University Press. Early stages of work, but the contents and contributors are here.

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Object Politics – the Sixth Issue of The Funambulist Magazine Now Published

Cover Design & RacismObject Politics – the Sixth Issue of The Funambulist Magazine Now Published

The issue includes guest columns about Native resistance in New Mexico by Jennifer Marley, and about the most recent Palestinian Festival of Literature by Bhakti Shringarpure. The articles of the main dossier are written by Charmaine Chua about the shipping container, Françoise Vergès about the banana, Manar Moursi & David Puig about Cairo’s street chairs, and Pascale Lapalud & Chris Blache (Genre & Ville) about gender and urban furniture in French cities. It also includes a short graphic essay about Ramallah’s Mukataa by Samir Harb and a text about the New Palestinian Museum “without objects” by Karim Kattan. The transcript of a 2014 Archipelago conversation with Miami artists/writers Gean Moreno & Ernesto Oroza examines the systems in which generic objects take place, while the photographic section is a partial report of the most recent Unknown Fields‘ expedition in Rajasthan’s garment factories. The three student projects invent a passport and a backpack for the refugees in Lesvos (Embassy for the Displaced), a kit of facial prosthetics to “trick biometrics” (Alix Gallet) and a bridge countering the segregating effects of the concrete walls of Baghdad (Sarah Almaki).

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Books received – Shakespeare, Bourus, Vickers

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A pile of books for the Shakespeare work – including Terri Bourus’s Young Shakespeare’s Young Hamlet in recompense for review work, and Brian Vickers’s The One King Lear to review.

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