Daniel Defert interview in German – History of Sexuality IV, Les aveux de la chair, will be published

Michel_Focault_13102015There is an interview with Daniel Defert in German here, in which he discusses Foucault’s life and work, Adorno, May 68 and political activism, the AIDES group he founded after his death, the lecture courses and the material sold to the BNF, and confirms that the History of Sexuality, Vol IV, Les aveux de la chair, will eventually be published. I already knew this from Defert, but this might be the first place it’s been publicly announced.

The article can be viewed by clicking on ‘Weiter zum Artikel’ when you load the page. Many thanks to Kai Frederik Lorentzen for the link.

Posted in Daniel Defert, Michel Foucault | 6 Comments

Mark Carrigan, Social Media for Academics (Sage, 2016) – now available to pre-order

51kbfc6sgol-_sx399_bo1204203200_Mark Carrigan’s book, Social Media for Academics, is now available to pre-order.

Social media is an increasingly important part of academic life that can be a fantastic medium for promoting your work, networking with colleagues and for demonstrating impact. However, alongside the opportunities it also poses challenging questions about how to engage online, and how to represent yourself professionally.

This practical book provides clear guidance on effectively and intelligently using social media for academic purposes across disciplines, from publicising your work and building networks to engaging the public with your research.  It is supported by real life examples and underpinned by principles of good practice to ensure you have the skills to make the most of this exciting medium.

You’ll find advice on:

  • Using social media to publicise your work
  • Potential pitfalls and how to avoid them
  • The evolving role of social media in higher education
  • Defining digital scholarship
  • Managing your identity online
  • Finding time for social media
  • Near-future trends in academia.

Visit Marks blog for more insights and discussion on social media academic practice at http://markcarrigan.net/

Posted in Publishing, Writing | Leave a comment

Virtual roundtable discussion, and free Antipode papers, on “Migration and the Refugee Crisis”

Open access Antipode papers on “Migration and the Refugee Crisis” to link to virtual roundtable discussion on this theme.

Antipode Editorial Office's avatarAntipodeFoundation.org

Antipode’s publisher, Wiley, runs a great philosophy blog – The Philosopher’s Eye. This Friday, 16 October, they will be hosting what they’re calling a “virtual roundtable discussion” on migration and the refugee crisis.

On the panel will be:

NessImmanuel Ness – activist and professor of political science at CUNY’s Brooklyn College, and editor-in-chief of The Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration (Wiley, 2013), Ness’ research focuses on labour, urban political economy, migration, imperialism, and social mobilizations, worker insurrections, strikes and solidarity;

ParekhSerena Parekh – professor of philosophy at Northeastern University, and author of Hannah Arendt and the Challenge of Modernity: A Phenomenology of Human Rights (Routledge, 2008), Parekh’s research interests include feminist theory, continental philosophy, the philosophy of human rights, and justice, responsibility and refugees; and

SinghReenee Singh – London-based family therapist, editor of the Journal of Family Therapy, and co-director of the Family Therapy and Systemic Research Centre.

To join the discussion (registration is…

View original post 572 more words

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Volume 33 Issue 5 now out – currently open access

The new issue of Society and Space is now out, and currently open access…

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Senior Research Fellow at University College London’s Institute of Advanced Studies 2015-16 – and talk on 23 November

IMG_1061 copyFor the 2015-16 academic year I’ll be a Senior Research Fellow at University College London’s new Institute of Advanced Studies.

As well as Tamar Garb as director and Catherine Stokes as administrator, there are already four junior research fellows in place. A call for other fellows to be visitors here has a deadline of 31 October 2015, with further rounds in January and March 2016.

I’m seeing this post as an opportunity to balance two things – getting my head down and writing and being part of an intellectual community. I’ll have a shared office at UCL, just round the corner from Jeremy Bentham, and will be dividing my time between there and libraries nearby.

I’ll be giving a talk at UCL on 23 November 2015, 6pm – “The Territories and Majesty of King John”, in ‘Common Ground’ (a room in the South Wing of the Wilkins building). This is the same talk I’ll be giving at Warwick a couple of weeks earlier (abstract).

.

Posted in Conferences, Jeremy Bentham, Shakespearean Territories, Universities, Writing | 2 Comments

Two posts in Warwick’s Politics and International Studies department

Assistant Professor and Assistant/Associate Professor vacancies in PAIS at Warwick:

Assistant Professor (76845-105)

Assistant or Associate Professor (72453-105)

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Marx’s Economic Manuscript of 1864-1865 – the draft of Capital, Vol III – now translated by Brill

50503Marx’s Economic Manuscript of 1864-1865 – the draft of Capital, Vol III – now translated by Brill. Really expensive at the moment, but a paperback with Haymarket will be released in a year’s time.

Translated by Ben Fowkes. Edited and with an Introduction by Fred Moseley.

Posted in Friedrich Engels, Karl Marx, Publishing | Leave a comment

Foucault 3/13 The Punitive Society (2015)

A terrific piece by Bernard Harcourt on the 1973 lectures. Many useful insights, including:

The core concept of illégalismes is a term that has somewhat erroneously been translated as “illegalities” in the English edition of Discipline and Punish. It would be more appropriate to use a neologism, such as illegalisms, because “illegalities” is actually the end state, that which, in some sense, resolves the struggle. Illegalities is what represents the culmination of a power struggle that operates through illegalisms.

– See more here

Clare O'Farrell's avatarFoucault News

Bernard E. Harcourt, Foucault 3/13 The Punitive Society: Didier Fassin, Axel Honneth, Nadia Urbinati, and the Question of the Political and Moral Economies of Punishment

[This article draws on a longer essay titled “The ’73 Graft: Punishment, Political Economy, and the Genealogy of Morals”]

In their fascinating and provocative articles on The Punitive Society, Didier Fassin, Axel Honneth, and Nadia Urbinati raise a set of critical questions about Foucault’s 1973 lectures, concerning:

  • the idea of civil war as a model for relations of power in society, and the related notion of the “criminal as social enemy” as a specific instantiation of the matrix of war;
  • the concept of “illegalisms” as the basis for a political economy of punishment that criminalizes the poor and minorities;
  • the relation of that particular political-economic theory to a Weberian-inspired, genealogical  analysis of the protestant roots of the wage- and prison-form;
  • the contemporary…

View original post 51 more words

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

J.R.R. Tolkien’s manuscript map of Rohan, Gondor, and Mordor

I’ve not read the Lord of the Rings since I was a teenager, but this story in Wired is interesting about the construction of the world in maps that was behind it as well as languages.

Biblioklept's avatarBiblioklept

Art of The Lord of the Rings final revised.indd

From the forthcoming The Art of the Lord of the Rings, which collects Tolkiens’s preparatory drawings for his epic. Via/more at Wired.

View original post

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Foucault 13/13 Seminar 3 (2015) livestream

Details of the third seminar in the Columbia series, today in New York and live streamed, on the recently translated The Punitive Society, with Didier Fassin and Axel Honneth.

Clare O'Farrell's avatarFoucault News

Livestream of Seminar 3 of Foucault 13/13
This will also be available as a recording after the event

October 12, 2015, 6:15pm
Didier Fassin, Institute for Advanced Studies (Princeton) and EHESS
Axel Honneth, University of Frankfurt & Columbia University
Nadia Urbinati, Columbia University

Moderators:
Bernard E. Harcourt, Columbia University
Jesús R. Velasco, Columbia University

View original post

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment