Which philosopher would fare best in a present-day university?

1123Which philosopher would fare best in a present-day university? – a discussion in The Guardian by Lloyd Strickland. If you know Lloyd’s work – which I do – then the answer is not surprising…

Posted in Gottfried Leibniz, Immanuel Kant, Publishing, Universities, Writing | 2 Comments

8 Critical Theory books that came out in October – Golder, Adorno and Lenk, Nealon, King, Withers, Coombs, Barthes, Holub

Critical-theory.com rounds up some recently published books – Golder, Adorno and Lenk, Nealon, King, Withers, Coombs, Barthes and Holub.

october-2015-critical-theory-books-672x372

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Barry Stocker on Foucault’s Théories et institutions pénales lecture course

Now with a link to the commentary on the lecture of 12th January 1972.

stuartelden's avatarProgressive Geographies

c9d71a6be7Barry Stocker has been making a series of posts on Foucault’s Théories et institutions pénales lecture course, which appeared earlier this year – an English translation is likely to be a couple of years away, since The Punitive Society has just come out, and Subjectivity and Truth will be the next one.

Dates below are those of Foucault’s lectures, with links to Barry’s posts on them.

24th November, 1971 – includes a useful discussion of the notion of a parlement

1st December, 1971 – part onepart two; part three

15th December, 1971

22nd December, 1971

12th January, 1972

I’ll add further links as they become available.

My review of the course was published at Berfrois earlier this year.

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Top posts on Progressive Geographies this week

A quiet week on the blog – working on proofs of an article and book, writing a lecture, planning some other ones, so mainly concentrating on those things…

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University College London’s Institute of Advanced Studies – visiting fellow scheme, deadline 31 October 2015

As I’ve said here before, for the 2015-16 academic year I am a Senior Research Fellow at University College London’s new Institute of Advanced Studies. As a reminder, the deadline for the first round of applications to have a post here, as a visiting fellow is 31 October 2015. Full details here.

We welcome applications from scholars at all stages of their careers to be Visiting Research Fellows (non-stipendiary) at the Institute of Advanced Study and spend time with us for a period between three months and one year.

We will provide desk space, membership of the IAS community and Common Ground, access to UCL resources including the library, full participation in IAS events (e.g. seminars, workshops and conferences) and a framework in which you can present your research and participate in a research community.  In return, we ask that you make a case as to why being at UCL will be beneficial for you and how, in turn, you will contribute to the IAS.

If you wish to apply, please complete this application form and e-mail it to Catherine Stokes.

Please note that we will issue further calls with deadlines of 31 January and 31 March 2016.

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Historical Materialism 2015 conference, London, 5-8 November – pre-registration

12191187_10153655008929534_3235795560830126263_oReminder: only 6 days left to pre-register for the HM 2015 London Conference

The Old is Dying and the New Cannot Be Born: States, Strategies, Socialisms

Twelfth Annual Historical Materialism Conference, School of Oriental and African Studies, Central London, 5-8 November 2015

As austerity tightens its grip around the throats of the peoples of Europe, but also rears its ugly head in Brazil and elsewhere, we are forced to recognize that it is not the mere byproduct of the « economic crisis » but a political project in its own right, one whose aim is to deepen and consolidate the most uncompromising forms of neoliberal capitalism. It cannot be said that this project has hitherto been met with passivity, even if social movements of resistance have been mostly far from strong enough to halt its advance. Yet something is perhaps beginning to change, namely the emergence of counter-austerity projects that have pitched themselves at a political – even electoral or governmental – level. With all their weaknesses, hesitations and contradictions, the chinks of light in Southern Europe, amongst others, should compel Marxists to pose a whole series of ‘old’ strategic and theoretical problems in new garbs and new configurations, but perhaps also to retire some of our dear fetishes and shibboleths, and to experiment with forms and strategies adequate to our present. Among the themes that have returned to the agenda are: the relationship of movements and parties of the radical Left to states and governments; the need for a political response to how class power is enmeshed with forms of domination that have gender, race, imperialism or sexuality as their axes; possible « socialist » futures and the « transitional » mediations implied by them; the guiding dichotomies of left thought: reform and revolution, revolution and revolt, state and movement, parties classes and masses; the link between the limits to capital and the limits of politics.
Over a hundred panels on a wide variety of topics and plenary sessions on: Race, Mobility and the State; Austerity and Socialist Strategy in Southern Europe; Social Reproduction Theory; Marxism and Religion; Workers’ Struggles in South Africa.

Provisional ProgrammeConference poster for download 

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Foucault’s Last Decade – working on the proofs

Elden - 2016 Foucault's Last Decade (first proofs)The proofs for Foucault’s Last Decade have now arrived, so I need to make time to work on them. The Polity webpage for the book is still incomplete, but you can read much more about the book here.

I’m also working on Shakespeare’s King John for a talk on 3 November, and parts of the Foucault: The Birth of Power book for presentations on 7 and 10 November (all details here), which means I am effectively working on parts of three books at once…

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

Deleuze, a Split with Foucault (2015)

An online piece discussing the Foucault-Deleuze relation.

Clare O'Farrell's avatarFoucault News

Mathias Schönher, Deleuze, a Split with Foucault, Foucault Blog, October 17, 2015
DOI: 10.13095/uzh.fsw.fb.117)

INTRODUCTION

There was a point in time, wrote Deleuze in 1990, before which he had been a political follower of Foucault, and after which he no longer shared Foucault’s “evaluation” of many issues.[1] This moment must have come in 1977, when Deleuze and Foucault found themselves in quite obvious mutual opposition, first in the debate over the New Philosophers and then in relation to the Croissant case. 1977 was the year of the German Autumn, as well as of the strongest protest and resistance movement of the Autonomia Operaia in Italy. It was, however, also a year of struggles in the Parisian universities, as well as among French intellectuals. Badiou stormed a lecture by Deleuze at…

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Two US talks in fall 2016 – Spindel conference in Memphis; Early Modern Literary Geographies conference in San Marino

After five talks in November, I will have a nice gap in my schedule of visiting talks. Part of the thinking is that I need some time to write so that I have something new to say…

The talks I’ve agreed to give, in several months time, at are interesting events in interesting places – further details to follow when I know more. At the moment I’ve not yet decided what I will be speaking on, though the first clearly connects to my interest in Foucault; and the second to Shakespeare. Slightly daunted by the prospect of a West-coast trip in term time, with rearranged teaching, but it’s too good a topic to turn down.

15-17 September 2016, Spindel Conference, ‘Temporalities of Philosophical Inquiry: Critical Histories of the Present’, Department of Philosophy, University of Memphis

14-15 October 2016, Early Modern Literary Geographies conference, Huntington Library, San Marino, California

Posted in Michel Foucault, Shakespearean Territories, Travel, William Shakespeare | 1 Comment

Critical Reflections on Multispatial Metagovernance: video of Bob Jessop’s 2015 Territory, Politics, Governance Lecture

Critical Reflections on Multispatial Metagovernance: video of Bob Jessop’s 2015 Territory, Politics, Governance Lecture

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