Top posts on Progressive Geographies this week

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Review forum on The Birth of Territory with Legg, Heffernan, McDonagh, Cohen, Sassen, Elden in Journal of Historical Geography (o/a link)

S03057488A review forum on The Birth of Territory is forthcoming in Journal of Historical Geography – Stephen Legg, Mike Heffernan, Briony McDonagh, Jeffrey Jerome Cohen, Saskia Sassen and a response by me. Steve has posted the preprint on academia.edu

Lots of nice things said, lots of thoughtful comments, suggestions, supplements, and criticisms. I try to address some the best I can within limited words in the response. But for now I’m just going to enjoy the opening lines of Mike’s comments:

Stuart Elden’s The Birth of Territory is a brilliant book – exhilarating, intimidating and occasionally exhausting. Although its scope transcends any particular discipline, it bears comparison with the best works on the history of geography and is arguably the most accomplished work in this field since Clarence Glacken’s Traces on the Rhodian Shore, a book with which it has much in common in terms of its intellectual ambition, historical range, and scholarly depth.

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Explorations of Style – a really useful writing resource, now with ‘how to use this blog’ page

Explorations of Style is a really useful writing resource, and now has a comprehensive ‘how to use this blog‘ page which serves as a kind of table of contents or index.

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Active Intolerance: Michel Foucault, the Prisons Information Group, and the Future of Abolition (2015)

An important collection available to pre-order – I wrote one of the endorsements.

Clare O'Farrell's avatarFoucault News

zurn-diltsActive Intolerance: Michel Foucault, the Prisons Information Group, and the Future of Abolition
Edited by Perry Zurn, Andrew Dilts
Palgrave Macmillan:November 2015

This book is an interdisciplinary collection of essays on Le Groupe d’information sur les prisons (The Prisons Information Group, the GIP). The GIP was a radical activist group, extant between 1970 and 1973, in which Michel Foucault was heavily involved. It aimed to facilitate the circulation of information about living conditions in French prisons and, over time, it catalyzed several revolts and instigated minor reforms. In Foucault’s words, the GIP sought to identify what was ‘intolerable’ about the prison system and then to produce ‘an active intolerance’ of that same intolerable reality. To do this, the GIP ‘gave prisoners the floor,’ so as to hear from prisoners themselves what to resist and how. The essays collected here explore the GIP’s resources both for Foucault studies and for prison…

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‘Foucault, Porshnev and the Revolt of the Nu-pieds’, Historical Materialism conference, London, 5-8 November 2015

c9d71a6be7I’ll be speaking about ‘Foucault, Porshnev and the Revolt of the Nu-pieds’, at the Historical Materialism conference, to be held in London between 5-8 November 2015. Here’s the abstract:

In his recently published lecture course from 1971-72, Théories et institutions pénales, Michel Foucault provides a two-part analysis. The second half of the course is his most detailed examination of medieval legal codes, examining practices of punishment, ordeal, confession and inquiry. It is a rich and nuanced analysis which will be invaluable in tracking his preoccupations. But it is in the first half of the course that we have the greatest surprise. Foucault spends seven lectures examining the Nu-pieds [bare feet] revolts of 1639-40 in Normandy, and the repression that followed. In his reading of these revolts, Foucault makes extensive use of Boris Porshnev’s 1948 study, translated into French in 1963 as Les soulèvements populaires en France de 1623 à 1648. At the time of the lectures, Porshnev’s Marxist account had been subjected to stinging critique by Roland Mousnier. Foucault steers a course between these two positions, though I would suggest he is closer to Porshnev politically and to Mousnier historical-conceptually. It is also interesting given the proximity of Foucault to Maoism at this time, that his choice of focus is a peasant, rather than worker’s, uprising. Given Foucault is often criticized for talking of the positive, productive side of power, but rarely examining it outside of antiquity; or of never showing how resistance takes place or is even possible, this analysis provides an important corrective.

Between this talk and the forthcoming one in Nottingham, which also looks at Théories et institutions pénales, I’m planning on covering most of the material destined for Chapter Two of Foucault: The Birth of Power. A good example of what I mean with talks that move the writing forward (‘my sabbatical rules‘ #6)…

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Free the map: Gazing at Belting’s Anthropology of Images from a map studies perspective

Tania Rossetto on Hans Belting’s An Anthropology of Images: Picture, Medium, Body at the Society and Space open site.

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Philippe Sabot, Le Même et l’Ordre: Michel Foucault et le savoir à l’âge classique

This looks interesting. Thanks to Graham Burchell for the link: Philippe Sabot, Le Même et l’Ordre: Michel Foucault et le savoir à l’âge classique.

29021100169610LDans Les mots et les choses (1966), Michel Foucault accorde une place centrale à l’analyse de la disposition archéologique du savoir classique. Le présent ouvrage s’attache à expliciter les principaux enjeux de cette analyse, en montrant qu’elle renvoie au fond à une double interrogation. De quelle pensée du Même l’épistémè de l’âge classique relève-t-elle ? Et comment cette pensée du Même en vient-elle à organiser la mise en ordre des choses dans des savoirs positifs (grammaire générale, histoire naturelle, analyse des richesses) qui s’élaborent eux-mêmes suivant les contraintes épistémologiques fortes d’une nomenclature et d’une taxinomie ? La première interrogation engage clairement le statut philosophique d’une archéologie du savoir de l’âge classique. La seconde implique en outre, pour l’archéologue, une manière de travailler et de penser à partir de l’archive discursive d’une époque.

Le livre de Philippe Sabot s’efforce ainsi de rendre compte de cette double dimension de l’analyse archéologique de Foucault en attirant l’attention à la fois sur l’effort de systématisation dont relève une telle analyse et sur le traitement particulier qu’elle propose des archives du savoir.

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Foucault, Œuvres I, II – forthcoming in the Pléiade series with Gallimard

Foucault, Œuvres I, II – forthcoming in the Pléiade series with Gallimard. Now has a page on the Gallimard site, with publication scheduled for November. On earlier reports, see here.

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My sabbatical rules for writing

I’m hoping to complete the manuscript for Foucault: The Birth of Power over the next 12 months – a sabbatical year and summer. I’ll be based in London most of the time. I’m also hoping to make considerable progress on the Shakespeare project. So, based on some previous experience – the Leverhulme fellowship which I had for The Birth of Territory, for example – I’m going to try to stick to the following plan.

  1. No email in the morning.
  2. Use the morning to write.
  3. Use afternoon (and frequently evening) for email, admin, editing, and reading.
  4. Facebook, Twitter, Feedly, etc. are not to be used on main computer; you have an iPad (kept in a different room) for that.
  5. Go to the British Library regularly, even if you don’t need to consult things. The Rare Books room is a place you’ve done a lot of good work before. Renew your ticket to the Warburg Institute for the same reason.
  6. Concentrate on the primary literature; the secondary literature can come later.
  7. Try to only agree to do talks that move the writing forward.
  8. You really can’t take on any other writing or editing projects.
  9. Going to see Shakespeare in the theatre counts as research. Make the most of being in London.
  10. Get to Paris regularly.
  11. Long bike rides help with coming up with ideas. This is not easy to do in London, where cycling requires constant concentration. So try to get out of the city at least once a week.
  12. Analogue Sunday – or at least, no work.
Posted in Books, Conferences, Cycling, Foucault's Last Decade, Foucault: The Birth of Power, Michel Foucault, Shakespearean Territories, Universities, William Shakespeare, Writing | 11 Comments

The 2015 Antipode RGS-IBG Lecture – “Offshore Humanism” by Paul Gilroy

Paul Gilroy to give the Antipode lecture at this week’s RGS-IBG conference.

Antipode Editorial Office's avatarAntipodeFoundation.org

On Wednesday 2 September Prof. Paul Gilroy (Department of English, King’s College London) will be presenting the 2015 Antipode RGS-IBG Lecture, “Offshore Humanism”.

After EmpireThe lecture will interrogate the contemporary attractions of post-humanism and ask questions about what a “reparative humanism” might alternatively entail. Prof. Gilroy will use a brief engagement with the conference theme — “geographies of the Anthropocene” — to frame his remarks and try to explain why antiracist politics and ethics not only require consideration of nature and time but also promote a timely obligation to roam into humanism’s forbidden zones.

The lecture will take place in the University of Exeter Forum’s Alumni Auditorium in Session 4 (from 16:50 to 18:30), and be followed by a drinks reception sponsored by the journal’s publisher Wiley.

Darker than BlueOur speaker is Professor of American and English Literature at King’s College London, having previously been Giddens Professor of Social Theory at the London School of Economics (2005-2012), Charlotte…

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