The Territories and Majesty of Shakespeare’s King John – UCL Monday 23 November 2015

I’ll be giving a talk with the title of ‘The Territories and Majesty of Shakespeare’s King John’ tonight at UCL.

Monday 23rd November, 6pm, IAS Talking Points seminar, Common Ground, University College London – with responses by Professor Helen Hackett, Department of English and Dr James Kneale, Department of Geography. Free pre-registration is requested.mercator_map

This lecture will discuss Shakespeare’s play King John around two themes – the question of majesty and that of territories. Majesty is a continual concern throughout the play, described as ‘borrowed’, ‘banished’, ‘resembling’, ‘dangerous’ or ‘the bare-picked bone’. John is seen as a usurping monarch, denying Arthur his rightful inheritance, but by the end of the play majesty has been so diminished by events it is perhaps worth very little. But what is that majesty over? Among other things, it is the lands of the kingdom. King John is one of only a handful of Shakespeare’s plays in which the word ‘territories’ appears. There is one mention in the opening scene, and one in the final act. The first of these had caused editors much confusion, because it is used with a definite article – ‘the territories’ – rather than a possessive ‘his’, ‘her’, ‘its’ or ‘their’ territories. What might this mean, and what might it indicate? Thinking about these questions of majesty, land, and territories, the talk will discuss how King John and contemporary play The Troublesome Reign of King John anticipate the dual themes of domestic disorder and foreign conquest found in Shakespeare’s other history plays.

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Top posts on Progressive Geographies this week

Very few new posts this week – I was in Paris working at the Bibliothèque Nationale, and the manuscripts reading room does not have wifi. Very good for working with no distractions! More on the work I did there on the Foucault project on Monday.

 

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Before and after peer-review in a diagram

car_peer_review_comic_12.jpg

This is rather good – from jasonya.com via Laurence Berg.

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Save Ashgate Publishing

A petition to save Ashgate press is here.

Ashgate Publishing Company was purchased by Informa (Taylor & Francis Publishing) in 2015. On November 24th, 2015, the North American office of the press in Burlington, Vermont will close and Ashgate’s US staff members, including Erika Gaffney, Ann Donahue, Margaret Michniewicz, Alyssa Berthiaume, Kathy Bond Borie, Seth Hibbert, Stephanie Peake, Martha McKenna, Lea Durfee, Suzanne Sprague, and Emilly Ferro will cease to be representatives of Ashgate.

According to an e-mail sent to series editors, plans are still being discussed for Ashgate’s publishing business in the UK. However, information has since emerged that the UK office is scheduled to close in December.

Independent academic presses like Ashgate have offered a safe haven for scholars working in certain subfields as University presses closed entire publishing specializations and fired editorial staff in response to campus austerity measures. Academic presses are more than profit margins, income from the backlist, utility bills, payroll, and marketing campaigns. Ashgate flourished through the bonds formed between editors and authors, the care and attention of copy editors, and above all, the good will of authors and readers. We the undersigned authors, readers, and reviewers of Ashgate books write to voice our appreciation for the accomplishments of Ashgate’s North American office. We urge Taylor & Francis to reverse course immediately and restore Ashgate’s US and UK offices.

9780754646556.jpgI’ve only worked with Ashgate once, but it was a good experience. Jeremy Crampton and I were struggling to find a publisher for the Space, Knowledge and Power: Foucault and Geography collection, and Val Rose at Ashgate understood the project and supported it. We even managed to get them to agree to a simultaneous paperback and hardback, and it has done, for an academic book and especially an edited collection, very well. Ashgate’s pricing strategy is something I’ve complained about before, but they supported books that other presses would not, so they deserve support. Please do sign the petition and share.

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Animal performativity: exploring the lives of donkeys in Botswana – Martha Geiger and Alice J. Hovorka

Commentary and video to accompany a new piece in Society and Space.

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Images of State and Stásis

This gallery contains 16 photos.

Originally posted on Cartographies of the Absolute:
[Talk delivered at Historical Materialism 2015, on a panel with Jason E. Smith and Jessica Whyte on The Ends of Homo Sacer] For fame had rumour’d that a fleet at sea, / Would…

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Society and Space Volume 33 Issue 6 now online

New issue of Society and Space now out…

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“Mourning becomes the law”—Judith Butler from Paris at the Verso website

Mourning becomes the law“—Judith Butler from Paris at the Verso website

[Update: it appears that the page has been removed – the link was previously correct. Please comment if you know the new site. There is an archived version here.]

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Global Discourse book award symposium on The Birth of Territory

9780226202570I’ve previously linked to the two reviews in the Global Discourse book award symposium on The Birth of Territory, by Jordan Branch and Jeppe Strandsbjerg.

My response is now online. It requires subscription, but a preprint is here.

Posted in My Publications, Politics, Territory, The Birth of Territory | 1 Comment

Foucault: the Birth of Power Update 6 – working on The Punitive Society, drafting Chapter Three, work on Chapter Six and giving some talks

FBP 6The bulk of the recent work has been on Chapter Three. This is mainly a discussion of The Punitive Society, along with related materials. The chapter is based on a long review essay I wrote on the French original for Historical Materialism back in early 2014. It is finally due to be published in the next issue of the journal, though a pre-print is here. In the last update I mentioned that I’d gone through my draft material on this course and checked all my initial translations to Graham Burchell’s official ones, and inserted the double page references. I then did some reorganization work to make it fit a book, rather than a standalone publication. I then read the whole text again, this time in English, reread parts of the French, and added some additional discussion and references and tightened the overall argument. I added some discussion of the ‘Truth and Juridical Forms’ lectures four and five throughout and mainly at the end. In theory this should have been one of the easiest chapters to draft; but there were still some structural issues that took a while to work out.

I also did a bit more work on some of the shorter texts from the early 1970s, including early pieces from Libération, and some other work on newspapers, including some from La cause du people unearthed by Felix de Montety. Foucault briefly discusses the contemporary situation concerning abortion rights in The Punitive Society, so I rewrote the beginning of Chapter Six – on activist and research work on health – using that as the opening example. It then goes into a detailed discussion of his work with the Group d’Information Santé. Also for that chapter I worked through the collection Politiques de l’habitat (1800-1850) one more time and said a bit about it. That collection is also discussed in Foucault’s Last Decade, but there is a detailed discussion of Foucault’s early-mid 1970s collaborative works in this manuscript, and I wanted to say a bit about it here. I think I’ve found a way to complement, rather than repeat, what is in the other book. Politiques de l’habitat is not an easy text to find, but it’s well worth a look.

In early November I gave talks on Foucault’s reading of the Nu-Pieds at the Historical Materialism conference (part of Chapter Two), and on his collaborative work at the LSE (drawing on Chapter Six). Both were useful in terms of sharpening the argument and thinking about the questions. The audio recordings can be found here.

I’ll be speaking about Foucault’s involvement with the Group d’Information Santé (from Chapter Six) in December, to a small closed seminar organized by Colin Gordon, and this may well be the last talk on Foucault before I submit this manuscript.

The proofs for Foucault’s Last Decade have also been corrected and the index should be compiled this week. As Foucault’s Last Decade gets closer to publication, and the writing of Foucault: The Birth of Power continues, I’ve reorganized the web pages on this site relating to the two books. A main page, with the description of the two books, is here. Audio and video recordings relating to them are here; and the updates I’ve been posting on the process of writing here.

Some translations, bibliographies, scans and links continue to be available at Foucault Resources. Developing from that work, earlier this year I compiled a piece on ‘The Uncollected Foucault’ for Foucault Studies – this a bibliography of the short pieces by Foucault that are not in Dits et écrits. Several such pieces can be found here. I’ve just done the proofs for the Foucault Studies piece and it should be out shortly.

Tomorrow I go back to Paris for five days at the Bibliothèque Nationale as I continue to work through Foucault’s reading notes, and I have a trip booked to IMEC in early December for some more archival work, mainly on the GIP. It’s obviously going to be difficult being back in Paris after Friday’s tragic events. Depending on how those visits go I will have a better sense of what work will need to be done in 2016.

Posted in Foucault's Last Decade, Foucault: The Birth of Power, Michel Foucault, Writing | 1 Comment