Geographica Helvetica forum on Heidegger, critical geography and the ‘black notebooks’ – call for further contributions

graphic_gh_cover_homepageThe multi-lingual journal “Geographica Helvetica” (Swiss Journal of Geography), an open access journal, has recently launched a discussion forum on “Heidegger and critical geography”.

In the discussion forum, contributors discuss the question how we should engage Heidegger’s thought after and beyond the publication of his diaries, the “Schwarze Hefte” (Black Notebooks). This has been a controversial discussion in philosophical circles, and we think that as many geographers have engaged Heidegger’s thought and still do so, a debate on whether or not we have to re-think our engagement post-“Schwarze Hefte” is somewhat warranted.

We have already a few contributions published – you’ll find them here:

More contributions are promised by Claude Raffestin, Geneva, Florian Grosser, St Gallen and Julia Verne, Frankfurt.

We would like to encourage more critical geographers to take part in this debate!

As always in Geographica Helvetica, this is a multi-lingual forum, so you can submit contributions in three (out of four) Swiss languages (German, French, Italian) as well as in English.

Anybody interested to participate with a contribution or to suggest potential interested scholars to contribute, please contact Benedikt Korf.

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Michel Foucault: A Research Companion – forthcoming in November from Sverre Raffnsøe, Morten S Thaning, Marius Gudmand-Hoyer

Michel Foucault: A Research Companion – forthcoming in November 2015 from Sverre Raffnsøe, Morten S Thaning, Marius Gudmand-Hoyer.

9781137351029

Michel Foucault continues to be hugely influential. His diagnoses challenge us to rethink crucial phenomena such as madness, discipline, the human sciences, the state, neoliberalism, sexuality and subject formation. Based on his work in its entirety, and with special emphasis on his many recently published lecture series, this book provides an updated, comprehensive and original account of his thought. By reading Foucault as a philosopher, it offers an extensive systematic assessment and discussion of his unique conception of philosophical practice and brings a unifying trajectory in his work to light.

Along with several other people I provided an endorsement for the cover. At the moment only an expensive hardback and e-book is listed – given the usefulness of this as a resource for students, I really hope it’s available in more affordable form soon.

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Foucault: The Birth of Power Update 3 – Théories et institutions pénales and activist work on health and asylums

FBP update 3Since the last update, I’ve been working on two aspects of this project.

The first was on the 1971-72 course Théories et institutions pénales, for Chapter Two. There are two main parts of the course, on the Nu-Pieds revolts of the mid-seventeenth century and then the birth of the monarchical state and the medieval rebirth of the inquiry. I spoke about the second in Nottingham earlier this month (a few thoughts here); and will be speaking about the first at the Historical Materialism conference in London in November. In working on these I took a look at some of Foucault’s sources, helped by the course’s editorial notes, but also by Foucault’s own reading notes archived in Paris. In particular, for the London event I’ll be talking about Foucault’s use of Boris Porshnev’s work. I say a bit more about the key text here, and appeal for help with his texts on feudalism here.

The second was on some of Foucault’s activism in the early 1970s. Although I will of course discuss the Groupe d’information sur les prisons (GIP), I was already fairly familiar with their material, and the story there is reasonably well-known. I will return to that group at some later stage. Much less clear is the story of Foucault’s contacts with two other groups on the model of the GIP – the Groupe Information Santé (GIS) and the Groupe Information Asiles (GIA). Foucault was actively involved in the former in its early stages, but only attended a single meeting of the latter, apparently leaving without any contribution. Both groups have interesting histories. While the archives of the GIP are in IMEC, and many documents have been published in France (an English translation of a lot of the material is forthcoming), with the GIS and the GIA the traces are harder to find. In his biography of Foucault David Macey suggests that the GIS “has left few documentary traces of its existence”, but that’s not entirely true.

I plan to go back to IMEC at some point, and I think they have some material from the GIS, but a bit of hunting around online bookstores earlier this year helped me find copies of two of the key texts – the GIS’s Oui, nous avortons and the GIA’s Psychiatrie: La peur change de camp, though the latter is also available online. I have a copy of a second GIS report, La médecine desordonnée, on order. Foucault and some doctors in the GIS published a brief manifesto in 1973 – strangely not in Dits et écrits or most English bibliographies. I have a copy, but am trying to get hold of the original journal issue it was printed in so I can take a look at the surrounding texts. The archives of the GIS are deposited at the Centre des Archives du Féminisme at the University of Angers. This archive is catalogued by Lucy Halliday, “Fonds GIS (Groupe Information Santé); Fonds Sylvie Rosenberg-Reiner” – online here. I’m not sure that a special visit to Angers is needed, given Foucault’s involvement was only at the very start, and there may be enough at IMEC, but this remains a possibility.

The GIA still exists, though in quite a different form, and has a website here. An open-access archive of all the issues of its journal Tankonalasanté is available here, and I was able to pick up a copy of a selection of its texts fairly easily, published by Maspero in 1975. The journal is fascinating as an insight into the concerns of the group and a wider network, including the GIS, and the production style and possibilities of activist texts at the time. Foucault’s role in the GIS is not always clear, and I don’t want to put someone else’s words into his mouth, so I am trying to discuss the groups in themselves without over-emphasising his involvement. That’s obviously even more important in terms of the GIA. But all three groups are part of the wider context in which his publications and courses are situated, and the plan at the moment is the activist work on asylums, prisons and health is discussed in the separate chapters on those themes (chapters Four to Six) rather than together, but this might change. I’ve written about 3000 words on the GIS, and can imagine doing that or more for the GIP. I don’t think there is much to say about the GIA, so it may be that I treat that more briefly alongside the GIS.

The next task is to go back and try to complete drafts of Chapters One and Two, which I’m hoping to do over the next few weeks.

You can read more about these books, along with links to previous updates, here. And, as a reminder, a lot of resources I produced while writing Foucault’s Last Decade are available here. It includes a list of audio files, a bibliography of collaborative projects, a list of short pieces which did not appear in Dits et écrits, comparison of variant forms of texts, a few short translations, and so on.

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The Birth of Territory reviewed in Politička misao by Višeslav Raos (in Croatian)

The Birth of Territory has been reviewed in Politička misao by Višeslav Raos (in Croatian). The review is open access, and is the second review in a Croatian journal (see also the one in Croatian International Relations Review by Daniel Šaric – also open access).

Many thanks to Krešimir Petković for letting me know about the new review, for saying that it is ‘unambiguously positive’, and for providing this translation of some of the conclusion:

A book like this is rare. Elden shows a genuine renaissance spirit, showcasing deep knowledge of ancient, medieval and renaissance political thought, as well as histories of language and theatre, which inevitably follow the conceptual relations between the spatial and the political…

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How We Write – the open access collection reviewed and highlighted

How-We-Write-cover-E-216x346How We Write – the open access collection edited by Suzanne Conklin Akbari, which includes thirteen short pieces on academic writing – has been getting  a bit of attention already. It was chosen as a highlighted title on open access site Unglue.it and has been reviewed in French at Ludite! Jeffrey Jerome Cohen also talks about his piece here.

As I said when I announced the book’s publication, 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. 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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Talk on Foucault’s collaborative projects, 10 November at the LSE

I’ve just agreed to give a talk on Foucault’s collaborative projects in November at the LSE. This is part of the seminar series on ‘Cities, Space & Development’, so I’ll talk about the work on urban infrastructure, hospitals and public health, conducted with CERFI, CORDA and his Collège de France seminar. This leads directly into the plan for Chapter Six of Foucault: The Birth of Power.

“Foucault’s Collaborative Projects: Hospitals, Habitat, Public Infrastructure”, 4.30pm, 10 November 2015, Department of Geography & Environment, London School of Economics.

Details of all forthcoming talks – at present deliberately kept to a specific focus and limited travel – are here.

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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.

Posted in Conferences, Foucault: The Birth of Power, Michel Foucault | Tagged , | 2 Comments

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.

Posted in Carl Schmitt, Michel Foucault | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

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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