Time Served: Discipline and Punish Forty Years On – a few thoughts after the Nottingham conference

SE in NottinghamOn Friday I gave the opening plenary lecture to the ‘Time Served: Discipline and Punish Forty Years On‘ conference, organised by Sophie Fuggle and held at the Galleries of Justice in Nottingham. The room we were in for much of the event was the former courtroom, and was a very appropriate setting for the event.

My talk was entitled “Before the Punitive Society: The Inquiry of Théories et institutions pénales” (abstract). I spoke about how the analysis of Théories et institutions pénales related to the ‘course summary’, to the third ‘Truth and Juridical Forms’ lecture from Rio in 1973, and Foucault’s preparatory notes for these lectures. [Update – the audio recording of my talk is available here]

There were some other very interesting papers, including from Sophie, Azrini Wahidi, Marcelo Hoffman, Colin Gordon and Philippe Artières. I thought it was striking how debates on the text itself have remarked rather static, with many of the same elements highlighted, even in the light in the new materials; but equally that the usefulness of the text for a range of activists remains strong.

On the first evening there was a screening of the Sur les toits film about French prison riots in the early 1970s. Well worth watching if you can locate a copy – the interviews with some of the prisoners and one of the warders involved were fascinating. Daniel Defert is also interviewed.

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Books received – Schmitt, Kurelić, Porchnev, JUCS, Annals, RP, The Funambulist

booksCarl Schmitt’s Dialogues on Power and SpaceZoran Kurelić (ed.), Violence, Art and Politics (a gift from one of the contributors, Krešimir Petković), Boris Porchnev’s Les soulèvements populaires en France de 1623 à 1648 (see why here), and recent issues of the Journal of Urban Cultural Studies, Annals of the AAGRadical Philosophy, and the launch issue of The Funambulist.

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Neil Smith Tribute, tomorrow in Barcelona

News of the Neil Smith tribute to be held in Barcelona tomorrow.

asevillab's avatarmultipliciudades

The Neil Smith tribute organized by Espais Crítics is approaching and I am thrilled to join the event tomorrow, as it will be a great opportunity not only to enjoy the interesting set of selected papers (full program here) and participate in a series of visits exploring the gentrification of Barcelona’s historic center, but also to meet some good old friends and catch up with the group’s research on the spatial challenges of the global crisis. I am going back to some of the keynote speakers’ contributions this weekend, especially by Eric Clark and Tom Slater whom I will interview at some point of the conference for the Espais Crítics project. Both Clark’s and Slater’s interventions on gentrification are inspiring —although very different in their personal approaches, eg see Clark’s pieces here and here, and Slater’s here and here— but the warm up for the event has…

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Top posts on Progressive Geographies this week

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Update on the Foucault/13 Years at the Collège de France at Columbia University – places closed; live streaming details

via Foucault News

Update on the 13/13 series of seminars from the website

The first seminar will take place  on September 14, 2015.

Thank you very much for your interest in the series Foucault 13/13. The seminar has received an overwhelmingly good response, and we have more applications than available seats. Please accept our apologies. The application process is now officially closed.

However, we will be live streaming the seminars and also arranging to have an overflow room where you could watch the ongoing seminars by audio-visual projection. We are doing everything possible to make this seminar conversation accessible nonetheless.

First, we will be streaming the seminar live on the multimedia page of the new website of the Foucault 13/13 series here: Multimedia.

Second, we will also have an overflow room if you would like to watch the live stream with others in the overflow room while the seminar is going on, and we will try to promote discussion in the overflow room with the help of our teaching assistants.  The overflow room will be located at the Columbia Law School, 435 West 116th Street, NY, and the exact room location will be posted on the blog page of the new website for Foucault 13/13.  The location for the first seminar on September 14, 2015, will be Room 105 at the Columbia Law School, Jerome Greene Hall.

Third, we will also be blogging on issues related to the seminar on the blog page of the new website for Foucault 13/13, and archiving prior recordings of the seminars. Our blog will be open and moderated for comments and you can find it here:http://blogs.law.columbia.edu/foucault1313/ Please do join us in that conversation as well.

We do hope that this will make it possible for you to follow the seminar series closely, even though you will not be able to be in the seminar room in person.  Again, we will do everything possible to make this seminar series accessible to you in overflow and virtually.

Thank you again for your interest.

Please do follow any news and developments regarding the Foucault 13/13 series either on the new website at Microsite or on our FB and/or Twitter pages.

Warm regards,

Bernard E. Harcourt and Jesus R. Velasco

– See more at:http://blogs.law.columbia.edu/foucault1313/2015/09/03/applications-closed-but-live-stream-live/#sthash.diG1j4Df.dpuf

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How we Write – open access collection edited by Suzanne Conklin Akbari: thirteen essays on academic writing

How We Write – the open access collection edited by Suzanne Conklin Akbari, which includes thirteen short pieces on academic writing – is now available.

While free to download, it was not free to produce. It is also available to buy in paperback, or you can leave a donation when you download the book.

How-We-Write-cover-E-216x346

This little book arose spontaneously, in the late spring of 2015, when a series of conversations emerged — first in a university roundtable on graduate student dissertation-writing, and then in a rapidly proliferating series of blog posts — on the topic of how we write. One commentary generated another, each one characterized by enormous speed, eloquence, and emotional forthrightness. This collection is not about how TO write, but how WE write: unlike a prescriptive manual that promises to unlock the secret to efficient productivity, the contributors talk about their own writing processes, in all their messy, frustrated, exuberant, and awkward dis/order.

The contributors range from graduate students and recent PhDs to senior scholars working in the fields of medieval studies, art history, English literature, poetics, early modern studies, musicology, and geography. All are engaged in academic writing, but some of the contributors also publish in other genres, includes poetry and fiction. Several contributors maintain a very active online presence, including blogs and websites; all are committed to strengthening the bonds of community, both in person and online, which helps to explain the effervescent sense of collegiality that pervades the volume, creating linkages across essays and extending outward into the wide world of writers and readers.

Contributors include: Michael Collins, Suzanne Conklin Akbari, Alexandra Gillespie, Alice Hutton Sharp, Asa Simon Mittman, Jeffrey Jerome Cohen, Maura Nolan, Richard H. Godden, Bruce Holsinger, Stuart Elden, Derek Gregory, Steve Mentz, and Dan Kline.

As one of the authors, I’m very grateful to Suzanne for the invitation and editing, and Eileen Joy and Chris Piuma for their production work. This is a book that does not seek to give advice, but to show how a range of people do things in a number of different ways. Please share widely…

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Geography and Politics Redux? – open access virtual theme issue of Transactions, edited by Richard Powell (including essay by me)

Screen Shot 2015-09-10 at 16.57.08Geography and Politics Redux?‘ – open access virtual theme issue of Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, edited by Richard Powell.

It includes my 2005 piece ‘Missing the point: globalization, deterritorialization and the space of the world‘.

That piece took a long time to come together, and I gave talks on the topic some years before. It also, as I recall, took a while to appear in print after acceptance. It was one of the first places that I tried to develop a theory of territory, and set the scene for much of what I went on to do since. As Richard generously says in a note to his introduction, “This paper forms the embryonic outline of the argument that was recently used in Elden’s magnum opus, The birth of territory (2013)”.

There are several great papers in this issue, all freely available for the next twelve months.

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Foucault on Prisons (and Elden on Schmitt) in Radical Philosophy open access to link to Nottingham conference

From the good people at Radical Philosophy, in relation to tomorrow’s conference:

A free two-day conference, ‘Time Served: Discipline and Punish Forty Years On,’ begins tomorrow at Nottingham Trent University, rethinking the legacy of Foucault’s text today and RP contributor Stuart Elden will be giving the first plenary. We’ve therefore opened up this interview with Foucault from 1977 (‘Prison Talk’ in rp16) as well as Stuart’s article on ‘Reading Schmitt geopolitically’ from rp161 (2010).

Foucault Interview

Reading Schmitt geopolitically:

Details of the Foucault conference are available here:

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Preparing for the ‘Time Served: Discipline and Punish Forty Years On’ conference

174160Tomorrow I’ll be giving the opening plenary lecture to the ‘Time Served: Discipline and Punish Forty Years On‘ conference, organised by Sophie Fuggle and held at the Galleries of Justice in Nottingham.

My talk is entitled “Before the Punitive Society: The Inquiry of Théories et institutions pénales” (abstract).

The talk is drawn from a longer piece, actually a first draft of Chapter Two of Foucault: The Birth of Power, which I’ve been working on the past few weeks. The first part of the chapter looks at Foucault’s analysis of the Nu-Pieds revolts of the seventeenth century, and especially how his work sits between the analyses of Boris Porchnev and Roland Mousnier. I’ll be speaking about that at the Historical Materialism conference in November. In the present talk I’m hoping to relate the analysis of Théories et institutions pénales, and its ‘course summary’, to the ‘Truth and Juridical Forms’ lectures from Rio in 1973. Both the summary and the Rio lectures extend the analysis of this course in important ways. To fill out some of the detail I’m going to say a bit about the work I’ve been doing over the past couple of months in Paris going through Foucault’s preparatory notes. The talk is currently too long, so one of the tasks today is to find some things to edit out, and to practice it again.

I’m travelling up this afternoon, as this evening there is a screening of the Sur les toits film about French prisons in the early 1970s. I’ve not seen this before, so looking forward to that.

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LSE has digitized Fabian society archives from 1884-2000

This sounds like a useful resource.

Jeremy Schmidt's avatarJeremy J Schmidt

Some really interesting historical tracts from the Fabian society on all sorts of topics–poverty, property, labour and so on–are now available in digital format here.

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