11 Critical Theory books that came out in November – another useful roundup at critical-theory.com. Butler, Evans, Goldsmith, Repo, Meiksins Wood, Badiou, Zaretsky, Zurn and Dilts, Negri, Llewelyn

11 Critical Theory books that came out in November – another useful roundup at critical-theory.com. Butler, Evans, Goldsmith, Repo, Meiksins Wood, Badiou, Zaretsky, Zurn and Dilts, Negri, Llewelyn

Peter Marcuse, Margit Mayer, Susan Fainstein, David Harvey, moderated by Neil Smith discuss radical urbanism and the right to the city.
Peter Marcuse, Margit Mayer, Susan Fainstein, David Harvey, moderated by Neil Smith,
This looks interesting – thanks to Jeremy Crampton for the link.
The unaccountably overlooked Georges Perec (member of Oulipo) and author of Espèces d’espaces (Species of Spaces) a great geographical fiction, is the subject of a symposium about his work. The cfp follows:
PEREC’S GEOGRAPHIES / PERECQUIAN GEOGRAPHIES
Interdisciplinary Symposium, University of Sheffield, Friday 6 May, 2016Georges Perec was one of the most inventive and original geographical writers of the twentieth century. His writing explores cities and streets; homes and apartments; conceptions of space and place; mathematical and textual spaces; imagined, utopian and dystopian spaces; time and the city; landscapes of memory and trauma; consumption and material culture; domestic spaces; everyday life, the everyday, the quotidian; ordinary and ‘infra-ordinary’ places. Perec addressed methods of urban exploration and observation; classification, categorisation and taxonomy; spatial inventories and indexes; and geographical and ethnographic description.
This symposium explores Perec’s Geographies (his own geographical writing) and the wider body of geographical writings…
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I’ve updated this post from March 2014 because a photocopy of a 36pp. typescript of the unpublished original French text is available at IMEC. It appears in the catalogue as reference FCL 1.10: “A propos de la notion d’individu dangereux dans la psychiatrie légale au XIXe siècle”.
This copy breaks off very slightly incomplete. The final sentence ends ‘… alors’; there is no French text according to ‘the judicial machine ceases to function’. The remainder of the material in the original post is correct.
A couple of months ago [update: in January 2014], I asked three minor questions concerning Foucault’s ‘About the Concept of the Dangerous Individual’ lecture in Toronto in 1977.
Following a useful exchange of comments with Javier Velásquez, it is clear that we have the answer to the first. The text in Dits et écrits is not a translation; but nor is it the entirety of the original French. It is an edited version of the original.
We have constructed a clear chronology of the publication history of this text to help…
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Back in Paris at the Bibliothèque Nationale today. A few hours going through another box of Foucault’s manuscripts at the Richelieu site, then over to the François Mitterrand site to go through some newsletters and pamphlets relating to his activism. Off to Caen tomorrow to work at IMEC, again mainly on his activist work with the Groupe d’information sur les prisons and Groupe Information Santé.
Proper update soon – previous ones here.
Another open access title from Open Humanities press.

Click to access Conio-2015_Occupy-A-People-Yet-To-Come.pdf
“The term Occupy represents a belief in the transformation of the capitalist system through a new heterogenic world of protest and activism that cannot be conceived in terms of liberal democracy, parliamentary systems, class war or vanguard politics. These conceptualisations do not articulate where power is held, nor from where transformation may issue. This collection of essays by world-leading scholars of Deleuze and Guattari examines how capitalism can be understood as a global abstract machine whose effects pervade all of life and how Occupy can be framed as a response to this as a heterogenic movement based on new tactics, revitalised democratic processes and nomadic systems of organisation. Seeing the question as a political tactic aimed at delegitimizing their protest, Occupiers refused to answer the question ‘what do you want?’, produce manifestos, elect leaders or act as a vanguard. Occupy: A People Yet to Come goes…
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Isabelle Stengers’ new book, In Catastrophic Times, is available for free download or print-on-demand.
Isabelle Stengers’ new book, In Catastrophic Times, is available for free as a .pdf download at this site. Here is a description of the book (which you can also buy in hard copy as well following the link above):
There has been an epochal shift: the possibility of a global climate crisis is now upon us. Pollution, the poison of pesticides, the exhaustion of natural resources, falling water tables, growing social inequalities – these are all problems that can no longer be treated separately. The effects of global warming have a cumulative impact, and it is not a matter of a crisis that will “pass” before everything goes back to “normal.”
Our governments are totally incapable of dealing with the situation. Economic warfare obliges them to stick to the goal of irresponsible, even criminal, economic growth, whatever the cost. It is no surprise that people were so struck…
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Andy Merrifield: Europe’s New Urban Question – lecture at University of Kentucky.
A pile of recent books bought or received. Alex Vasudevan’s Metropolitan Preoccupations: The Spatial Politics of Squatting in Berlin was sent by him; and Richard Whatmore, What is Intellectual History? came from Polity – preordered in recompense for review work. Both look really interesting.
The rest were bought and, except for Saccio, Shakespeare’s English Kings, they are all for the Foucault work. Trois milliards de pervers is a reproduction of an issue of the Recherches journal (no 12) run by Guattari’s CERFI group – it was banned as an obscene publication and original copies are very hard to find. This is a reproduction that appeared earlier this year. Foucault spoke out in defence on the journal and was part of a discussion in the next issue. Also a copy of Recherches no 46 which is François Fourquet’s reflection on the collaborative work done with Guattari, Deleuze, Foucault and others in the early 1970s. The book with no spine marking is the first report from that work, Généalogie des équipements collectifs : première synthèse, which appeared in 1973. These works are all listed in this site’s bibliography of Foucault’s collaborative projects. The final book is the very recent Foucault à Münsterlingen, which is a documentary account of Foucault’s visit to the ‘fête des fous’ in 1954. It includes some reproductions of Foucault’s texts and letters relating the translation work he did on Ludwig Binswanger.
