Figure/Ground interview with Günter Figal on his work and his recent resignation as president of the Heidegger society in the wake of the ‘Black Notebooks’

Figure/Ground interview with Günter Figal – discusses his work and his recent resignation as president of the Heidegger society in the wake of the ‘Black Notebooks’.

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“Through A Window” application of Rhythmanalysis at SFU

Lefebvre’s work on rhythmanalysis as the basis for an exhibition at Simon Fraser University.

Society for Radical Geography, Spatial Theory, and Everyday Life's avatarSociety for Radical Geography, Spatial Theory, and Everyday Life

An exhibit at Simon Fraser University is exploring the application of Lefebvre’s rhythmanalysis in art! “Curated by Melanie O’Brian and Amy Kazymerchyk, Through A Window traces the history of art at SFU of the past 50 years. The inspiration behind the project stems from Henri Lefebvre’s book Rhythmanalysis (1992), particularly the chapter “Seen from the Window,” which allows us to consider three social, spatial, and material windows of SFU, and explore different rhythms since SFU’s inception in 1965.

Lefebvre’s method of rhythmanalysis begins with observing the rhythms of the body and how they are impacted by the natural and synthetic rhythms of the economies and cultures we live within, which in turn produces social practices and public spaces.

‘It is such a big idea, and SFU is a portal,’ explained Melanie O’Brian, the director of SFU Galleries. “Here we can look at those big and small rhythms in a…

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New Society and Space editors – Alex Vasudevan and Darshan Vigneswaran

Society and Space announces its two new editors – Alex Vasudevan and Darshan Vigneswaran. They are both in for interesting, exciting, and demanding work, joining a terrific existing team.

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Jeffrey Jerome Cohen’s next projects – “Earth” and “Veer Ecology”

Jeffrey Jerome Cohen’s next projects – “Earth” and “Veer Ecology” – details at In the Middle.

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When we return from Oregon I have a semester of leave to enjoy, so I will not be in the classroom for a while (though I am doing the usual, crazy amount of travel). GW has a program called the Dean’s Research Chairs which, should your application be selected, provides a reduced teaching load for three years so that you can either begin or complete a project. I want to share with you what I proposed, since both recently went under contract and are my preoccupation for the foreseeable future. I swore that Stone was my last solitary project, so not surprisingly both books I will be working on in the next two years are collaborative…

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The Funambulist Magazine Launch at e-flux – audio recordings of the presentations and a few photographs

Photo-by-Mohammad-SalemyThe Funambulist Magazine Launch at e-flux – audio recordings of the presentations and a few photographs.

We happily launched The Funambulist Magazine on August 13 at e-flux (New York) in the presence of several dozens of friends and intrigued readers. Following are a few photographs, as well as the presentations given that night. You can listen to the full presentation which includes my introduction to the magazine, as well as the three first issue, or specifically listen to each of the three presentations (marked on the file above) given by Sadia Shirazi about the militarization of Lahore (Funambulist Magazine 01/Sept15: Militarized Cities), Olivia Ahn about the american suburbia as a spatial apparatus producing gender (Funambulist Magazine 02/Nov15: Suburban Geographies), and Minh-Ha T. Phamabout a particular high heel shoe that supposes the existence of a standardized “Asian foot” (Funambulist Magazine 03/Jan16: Sartorial Politics).

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New Series – Cultural Geographies: Rewriting the Earth

A new book series with Ashgate – Cultural Geographies: Rewriting the Earth

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Posted by Katy Crossan, Senior Commissioning Editor

Ashgate is delighted to announce the launch of a new series, Cultural Geographies: Rewriting the Earth, with series editors Paul Kingsbury (Simon Fraser University, Canada) and Arun Saldanha (University of Minnesota, USA).

Social and Cultural Geography series postcard

Cultural geography has witnessed profound changes in recent years on three interrelated levels: theoretical, methodological, and socio-political. In terms of theory, new conceptions of culture have emerged which examine social and geographical differentiation as involving objects, affect, nonhumans, mobility, emotion, queerness, assemblage, materiality, the unconscious, biopolitics, relationality, and intersectionality. At the level of methodology, experiments with fieldwork and writing practices demonstrate the extent to which cultural geography has learnt from and contributes to many areas of policy, science, therapy, ethics, aesthetics, and activism. Finally, in terms of the socio-political and engagements with the world outside of academia, cultural geographers are exploring the multiple crises of energy, climate change, nationalism…

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Discards, Diverse Economies, and Degrowth Forum By Josh Lepawsky and Max Liboiron

A new forum of short open access pieces at the Society and Space open site.

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Michel Foucault à Münsterlingen: À l’origine de l’Histoire de la folie – forthcoming in November 2015

1e14da743cMichel Foucault à Münsterlingen: À l’origine de l’Histoire de la folie – an intriguing collection of texts, photographs, correspondence and commentaries on Foucault in 1954 is forthcoming in November 2015. It revolves around a visit Foucault made to a Swiss clinic in Münsterlingen in 1954 for a ‘feast of fools’. This was also the year in which Foucault’s first book Maladie mental et personalité appeared, as well as his translation of Ludwig Binswanger’s Dream and Existence.

This book is in the same series as Le beau danger and La grande étrangère, which are translated with University of Minnesota Press as Speech Begins After Death and  Language, Madness and Desire, so perhaps an English translation will follow, though the Foucault in here seems only to be his correspondence with Binswanger and some notes on the history of psychiatry and Binswanger.

En 1954, Michel Foucault participe à une fête des fous à l’asile psychiatrique suisse de Münsterlingen, dont il reste des photos, inédites. Étrange cérémonie, survivance d’un rituel hérité directement du Moyen Âge, qui marqua le jeune philosophe en train d’élaborer une nouvelle manière de parler de la folie et de son histoire.

Cette visite de Michel Foucault en mars 1954 à l’asile psychiatrique suisse de Münsterlingen le jour d’un carnaval des fous nous apprend beaucoup à la fois sur le jeune philosophe – l’année 1954 est riche en événements pour lui –, mais aussi sur ce rituel qui a perduré jusqu’au milieu du xxe siècle.

Photos, archives, textes éclairent ce moment trop souvent négligé par les spécialistes de Michel Foucault. Ce début des années 1950 est pourtant marqué par l’entrée de Foucault dans les asiles et par sa passion pour les innovations qui touchent la psychologie clinique.
C’est la germaniste Jacqueline Verdeaux, munie d’un Leika, qui photographie. Ces images laissent entrevoir l’étrange sensation qu’a pu ressentir Foucault lors de ce jour improbable où les fous « jouent » aux fous. Une sensation d’autant plus étrange que l’asile cantonal est, avec la clinique universitaire du Burghölzli de Zürich, l’une des plaques tournantes de la psychiatrie suisse.
Ce livre, qui aborde une période inexplorée, et non abordée dans La Pléiade à paraître, nous pousse à renverser les perspectives familières concernant Michel Foucault.

Table of contents here.

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Foucault’s posthumous publications – review in Inside Higher Education, and some corrections

image_miniTwo volumes of Foucault’s posthumous publications are reviewed in Inside Higher Education by Scott McLemee. The review looks at Speech Begins After Death and  Language, Madness and Desire, both published by University of Minnesota Press.

The review doesn’t say very much at all about the books themselves, and there are unfortunately some inaccuracies here. Dits et écrits was a posthumous collection, not a posthumous publication in a strict sense. All the texts within it had been published in Foucault’s lifetime, or were authorised by him and appeared after his death – i.e. the texts in the Technologies of the Self volume. The key addition of these volumes, other than convenience, was the translation of works published in Foucault’s lifetime in languages other than French. Lots of texts were excluded because they violated Foucault’s wish (which wasn’t in a formal will). Some were missed due to simple omission. But Defert was planning this collection from at least 1986, possibly earlier and maybe even during Foucault’s lifetime, so it’s not justified to make the inference about his mind being changed.

I think the key break with the ‘no posthumous publications’ request was in the lecture courses – not in the transcriptions themselves, but in the editorial notes, which frequently, and increasingly as the series went on, quote from the course manuscripts. By the time of Lectures on the Will to Know (2011), an entire article-length piece on Oedipus was in an appendix, and by then it was clear that more and more material was likely to be published. (The French original of Speech Begins After Death  was published the same year.)

It is also worth noting that On the Punitive Society is not the last of the Foucault courses to be translated; because there are two more to come, both of which are out in French. Finally, though this is a difference of view, not of accuracy, to my mind, Language, Madness and Desire contains quite a lot of new material which wasn’t clear from previous publications, notably on Sade. (My review of this volume is forthcoming in Cultural Geographies.)

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Feature on Terror and Territory (interview, review and profile) in Iran’s Shargh Daily

There is a full-page feature on my 2009 book Terror and Territory in Iran’s Shargh Daily newspaper. It was put together by Sahand Sattari, and includes a translation of an interview with Exploring Geopolitics, a review of the book, and a short profile of my background, publications and current projects. Many thanks to Sahand for his work.

Iran feature copy

Posted in My Publications, Territory, Terror and Territory | 2 Comments