The Birth of Territory reviewed in Law, Culture and the Humanities by Thanos Zartaloudis

9780226202570The Birth of Territory is reviewed in Law, Culture and the Humanities by Thanos Zartaloudis (requires subscription). It’s a generous summary of the book and says a few things about the legal aspects of the argument.

To the legal audience the numerous references and remarks on the role of law in the eventual conception of territory (and sovereignty), as well as the explanatory note on the tension and co-existence of, for instance, civil and canon law, would certainly be a useful entry point into the book for students and scholars. The book is, further, a welcome call for continuous exploration of the lines of questioning that are offered in a historically sensitive map of territory and of its relation to law and spatial strategies of power.

You can read more about this book, with links to all the reviews I know of, on this page.

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Elsevier buy Social Science Research Network (SSRN)

News yesterday that Elsevier had bought Social Science Research Network (SSRN) has caused a lot of controversy. SSRN is used to share work in progress, Elsevier is a controversial publisher with expensive subscriptions. The Duck of Minerva has one take on this – ‘Selling out to the enemy of open access‘.

 

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Royalties

A recent conversation on social media about royalties reminded me of this post from some years ago…

stuartelden's avatarProgressive Geographies

Conversation with a (smart) undergraduate student yesterday, about the amount of money academics make from book sales. I asked him how much he thought an academic got in royalties for a £20 book. ‘About £9?’ It’s actually closer to 50p; perhaps £1 if you’ve struck a good deal…

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Mark Neocleous, The Universal Adversary: Security, Capital and the ‘Enemies of All Mankind’ – a few thoughts

As I’ve previously mentioned, Mark Neocleous, The Universal Adversary: Security, Capital and the ‘Enemies of All Mankind’ is now out with Routledge. Here’s the backcover description:

9781138955165

The history of bourgeois modernity is a history of the Enemy. This book is a radical exploration of an Enemy that has recently emerged from within security documents released by the US state: the Universal Adversary. Neocleous shows how the concept of the Universal Adversary draws on several key figures in the history of ideas, said to pose a threat to state power and capital accumulation. Within the Universal Adversary there lies the problem not just of the ‘terrorist’ but, more generally, of the ‘subversive’, and what the emergency planning documents refer to as the ‘disgruntled worker’. Taking the figure of the disgruntled worker as its starting point, the book introduces some of this worker’s close cousins – figures often regarded not simply as a threat to security and capital but as nothing less than the Enemy of all Mankind: the Zombie, the Devil and the Pirate. In situating these figures of enmity within debates about security and capital, the book engages an extraordinary variety of issues that now comprise a contemporary politics of security, from crowd control to contagion, from the witch-hunt to the apocalypse, from pigs to intellectual property, in a compelling analysis of the ways in which security and capital are organized against nothing less than the ‘Enemies of all Mankind’.

I’ve now read the book, which I greatly enjoyed. Mark taught me as an undergraduate, and supervised my PhD thesis, and the book is very much a reflection of his spoken style. While a serious topic, the nature of the figures examined is obviously entertaining as well as challenging. People familiar with Mark’s other work – on administration, police, security, monsters and fascism and so on – will find plenty of connections, and it’s interesting how these themes connect up together here. Indeed, it’s possibly the first thing of Mark’s I’ve read where I could see the connection between all these aspects of his work – the police and security work obviously connected to his first book on administration, and he’s shown how domestic politics and international politics often work in related ways, but The Monstrous and the Dead book (which was of course a development of his work on fascism) now clearly appears as central to that other work too.

The book ranges from serious readings of canonical political theory – Hobbes and Bodin, for example – to engagement with figures from popular culture and contemporary news events. The figure of the ‘universal adversary’ comes from US security doctrine, but as the description above indicates, draws on a much wider range of political, racist, imperial and class issues. The book retains a strong Marxist perspective, and stresses how class politics has often been written out of critical perspectives on terrorism and security. Foucault is another figure discussed and used, and it is interesting to think about how these emblematic figures – the disgruntled worker, the zombie, the pirate – function in a similar way to Foucault’s constitutive subjects of sexuality – the pervert, the hysteric, the masturbating child.

It’s quite a short book, and I read it on a couple of train journeys. Given the direction of my current work it’s not a book I expect I will be using for my research any time soon, though I’m sure I’ll return to it at some point. It’s a useful antidote to those who think that thinking about the ‘enemy’ means you need to read Carl Schmitt. People interested in, for example, Daniel Heller-Roazen’s work on pirates, or Grégoire Chamayou’s book on Manhunts will find much to consider here, as well as those working on the ongoing ‘war on terror’, security, and anticipation.

Posted in Daniel Heller-Roazen, Karl Marx, Mark Neocleous, Michel Foucault, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Books received 2 – Shakespeare and Heidegger

IMG_1519.JPGTwo (poor quality) second-hand Shakespeare books and the last of the Oxford sale books I’d ordered, plus the first volume of Heidegger’s lectures from the Gesamtausgabe.

 

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Books received 1 – review work for Verso

A number of recent and not-so-recent books from Verso after I wrote a report for them. IMG_1517.JPG

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Graham Harman, Dante’s Broken Hammer

9781910924303Graham Harman, Dante’s Broken Hammer, forthcoming in October 2016 from Repeater Books. His Immaterialism: Objects and Social Theory recently appeared with Polity.

In this book the founder of object-oriented philosophy transforms one of the classic poets of the Western canon, Dante Alighieri, into an edgy stimulus for contemporary continental thought. It is well known that Dante’s poetic works interpret love as the moving force of the universe: as embodied in his muse Beatrice from La Vita Nuova onward, as well as the much holier persons inhabiting Paradiso. Likewise, if love is the ultimate form of sincerity, it is easy to interpret the Inferno as a brilliant counterpoint of anti-sincerity, governed by fraud and blasphemy along with the innocuous form of fraud known as humor (strangely absent from all parts of Dante’s cosmos other than hell). In turn, the middle ground of Purgatorio is where Harman locates Dante’s clearest theory of sincerity. Yet this is only the beginning. For while Dante provides a suitable background for the metaphysics of commitment found in such later thinkers as Pascal, Kierkegaard, Sartre, and Badiou, he also provides even more important resources for overcoming two centuries of philosophy shaped by Immanuel Kant.

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Christian-François de Kervran, Les dix et une nuits de Jean Barraqué et Michel Foucault à Trélévern

couverture-Kervran-411x565This looks a curious new book on the very early Foucault – Christian-François de Kervran, Les dix et une nuits de Jean Barraqué et Michel Foucault à Trélévern.

Au printemps 1952 le philosophe Michel Foucault et Jean Barraqué, compositeur de musique sérielle, passent onze nuits au bord de mer dans le village de Trélévern (Côtes-du-Nord). Ils sont jeunes, respectivement vingt-six et vingt-quatre ans et encore inconnus.
En 1951 Foucault a été reçu à l’agrégation de philosophie. En 1952 il obtient un diplôme de psychologie pathologique. Barraqué vient d’achever l’écriture de sa Sonate pour piano commencée deux années auparavant.
Barraqué est pratiquement un enfant du pays et il fait découvrir sa Bretagne au poitevin Foucault. Ils sont amis depuis quelques mois seulement. La liaison, passionnelle et orageuse, de ces deux écorchés, dont ce texte fait résonner quelques échos, durera jusqu’en 1956, Barraqué prenant l’initiative de la rupture.
D’après documents et témoignages familiaux, l’auteur, tout en restituant les pompes et les œuvres de ce coin de Bretagne au tout début des années 50, fait valoir les paris idéologiques et culturels, entre doutes et espoirs, des jeunes Foucault et Barraqué, qui, malgré leur actuelle différence de notoriété, deviendront tous deux d’importants novateurs dans la pensée et dans l’art du XXe siècle.

Christian-François de Kervran est le pseudonyme d’un universitaire et essayiste, fin connaisseur de la Bretagne et de son folklore. Il a publié des études sur poètes et romanciers de l’Ouest, entre autres Tristan Corbière, Max Jacob et Henri Queffélec.

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Foucault: The Birth of Power Update 15 – revision and resubmission of the manuscript, and table of contents

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While I had made some changes to the manuscript after submission, and again after receiving the reports, on Sunday evening I finished four long days of thoroughly revising the text and resubmitted it to the publisher.

Just as I was beginning the review process for the second book I received a very nice letter from Daniel Defert, Foucault’s long-term partner, saying how much he’d liked Foucault’s Last Decade. This was obviously a wonderful thing to receive, and gave me a great motivation to finish up this second study.

The key changes are to the Introduction, which is restructured and some parts extensively revised. I wrote a bit about the work here and here. I think the Introduction now more clearly sets up the argument, approach and sources of the work. I also made lots of changes through the text, and added some sentences to the Conclusion. While the reports had been overwhelmingly positive about the book, I took this opportunity to go through the text thoroughly and to address any remaining concerns.

The resubmitted manuscript is just over 94,000 words – so about 8,000 words shorter than Foucault’s Last Decade. It is comprised of six chapters – Measure, Inquiry, Examination, Madness, Discipline, Illness – a substantial Introduction and a briefer Conclusion. The Conclusion, as well as closing off this book, also opens the way to Foucault’s Last Decade, though the two books can be read independently. The Introduction highlights some key themes from Foucault’s work in the 1960s – his time in Tunisia and at Vincennes, the writing of The Archaeology of Knowledge and the early drafts of that text, and three key themes of 1960s work: archaeology, literature and political work on madness and medicine beyond History of Madness and Birth of the Clinic. If, in time, I write a book on Foucault in the 1960s, these will be key issues to explore there.

Foucault: The Birth of Power is projected for publication in January 2017. Given the timescale for the production of Foucault’s Last Decade this is about right – compared to other publishers I’ve worked with, Polity are quite fast. But no Anglophone publisher seems comparable to Foucault’s experience with Gallimard – he delivered one manuscript in August and it was out by the end of the year…

I also spent some time revising my book chapter on Farge and Foucault’s Le désordre des familles, which will be the last Foucault-related work I am doing for a while. I will be speaking about the books at an internal Warwick conference in June, and giving a much developed version of my paper on ‘Foucault and Shakespeare’ in Memphis in September, but those are on the basis of already completed work. The next work, long the ‘next project’ and sometimes conducted in parallel to this Foucault work, will be on Shakespeare.

The first update on the writing of Foucault’s Last Decade was in July 2013. I had done a lot of work on Foucault’s courses, over several years, which fed into this project, but July 2013 was when I first began working on this as a book. Now, almost three years later, two books are complete. The second came together much quicker, but that was in large part because so much of it was written when it was still intended to be part of the first. My update from April 23 2015 on the splitting of the work into two books explains what happened in more detail.

Here’s the full contents (the actual table of contents will likely just have the chapter titles, not sections):

Foucault: The Birth of Power

Introduction: Out of the 1960s

  • Approach and Sources
    • Lecture Courses
    • Other Materials
  • From Tunisia and Vincennes to the Collège de France
  • The Order of Discourse
  1. Measure – Greece, Nietzsche, Oedipus
  • Truth and the Will to Know
  • Greek Juridical and Political Practice
  • Nietzsche and Invention
  • Oedipus, Knowledge and Political Power
  1. Inquiry – Revolt, Ordeal and Proof
  • Revolt: The Nu-Pieds
  • Ordeal: From Germanic Law to the Monarchical State
    • From Feudalism to Capitalism
  • Inquiry: Truth and Power
  • Preparatory Materials
  1. Examination – Punishment, War, Economy
  • Modes of Punishment
  • Civil War and the Social Enemy
  • Religion, England, France
  • Political Economy
  • Two Methodological Issues
  1. Madness – Power, Psychiatry and the Asylum
  • Early Seminars and the Case of Pierre Rivière
  • Rewriting the History of Madness
  • The Sources of Power
  • Space and the Panopticon
  • The Groupe Information Asiles
  1. Discipline – Surveillance, Punishment and the Prison
  • The Groupe d’Information sur les Prisons
  • Survey and Punish
    • Three Moments
    • Supplice
    • Panopticism
    • The Search for Truth – Measure, Inquiry, Examination
    • Marxism and the Productive Body
    • A Wider Audience
  1. Illness – Medicine, Disease and Health
  • The Groupe Information Santé and the Biopolitics of Birth
  • Collaborative Research Work on the ‘Equipments of Power’
  • Curing Machines and Habitat
  • The Rio Lectures on Social Medicine

Conclusion: Towards Foucault’s Last Decade

 

I recently published an essay at Berfrois which discusses both Foucault’s Last Decade and The Birth of Power, both in terms of its content and the research process that I followed. An excerpt from Chapter Six of the manuscript was published by Viewpoint: The Biopolitics of Birth: Michel Foucault, the Groupe Information Santé and the Abortion Rights Struggle”. Both texts are open access.

Audio and video recordings relating to these books are here; and a full list of the updates I’ve been posting on the process of writing here. Some translations, bibliographies, scans and links are available at Foucault Resources.

Foucault’s Last Decade is now available worldwide.

Posted in Foucault's Last Decade, Foucault: The Birth of Power, Michel Foucault, Uncategorized, Writing | 5 Comments

Books received – Oxford Shakespeare volumes

A pile of volumes in the Oxford Shakespeare series -there was a sale on, so I picked up a number of ones I didn’t already have that will inform work over the next few months.IMG_1510.JPG

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