Laurence Hemming reviews Thomas Sheehan’s Making Sense of Heidegger at NDPR

Laurence Hemming reviews Thomas Sheehan’s Making Sense of Heidegger at NDPR.

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Beyond Calculation? w/ Hubert Dreyfus

Hubert Dreyfus keynote lecture on calculation.

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Books received – Shakespeare, Mousnier, Lefebvre

Books received 23 June

Two OUP editions of Shakespeare, Roland Mousnier’s Peasant Uprisings – used by Foucault in Théories et institutions pénales, and two first editions of Lefebvre’s books in Axelos’s Arguments series.

Posted in Books, Foucault: The Birth of Power, Henri Lefebvre, Michel Foucault, Politics, Shakespearean Territories, William Shakespeare | 2 Comments

Cartographic mirages: Ferretti on Blais

Hélène Blais’ Mirages de la carte reviewed at the Society and Space open site.

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Wendy Brown, David Held, Claire Colebrook, Elizabeth Ferris – Keynote lectures – live-streamed from Durham

Wendy Brown, David Held, Claire Colebrook, Elizabeth Ferris keynote lectures live-streamed from Durham conference on Human migration and the environment: futures, politics, invention.

Durham University – 29 June – 1 July 2015.

Conference keynote lectures live-streamed on YouTube: http://www.durhamconference.eu/keynotes/

Professor David Held – Monday 29 June 9:30 am (GMT)

Professor Wendy Brown – Monday 29 June 4:45 pm (GMT)

Professor Claire Colebrook – Tuesday 30 June 4:45 pm (GMT)

Elizabeth Ferris – Wednesday 1 July 9:00 am (GMT)

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Political Geography seeks two new Associate Editors

Political Geography seeks two new Associate Editors – details here.

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Félix Guattari on writing Anti-Oedipus in The Paris Review

guattari-movieFélix Guattari on writing Anti-Oedipus in The Paris Review (via critical-theory.com).

Posted in Felix Guattari, Gilles Deleuze, Writing | 2 Comments

Future imperfect and tense

Derek Gregory rounds up three books on ‘later modern war’.

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A clutch of forthcoming books on war that seek, in different ways, to illuminate dimensions of what I’ve been calling ‘later modern war’:

Antonia ChayesBorderless Wars (due in August at an eye-popping price from Cambridge University Press):

9781107109346In 2011, Nasser Al-Awlaki, a terrorist on the US ‘kill list’ in Yemen, was targeted by the CIA. A week later, a military strike killed his son. The following year, the US Ambassador to Pakistan resigned, undermined by CIA-conducted drone strikes of which he had no knowledge or control. The demands of the new, borderless ‘gray area’ conflict have cast civilians and military into unaccustomed roles with inadequate legal underpinning. As the Department of Homeland Security defends against cyber threats and civilian contractors work in paramilitary roles abroad, the legal boundaries of war demand to be outlined. In this book, former Under Secretary of the Air Force Antonia Chayes examines these…

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Writing about writing, and writing about theory and the use of languages

Two short pieces recently drafted – a contribution to an edited book on ‘How we Write’, and a piece on the use of other languages in my research. The first is entitled ‘Writing by Accumulation’, and in keeping with the book as a whole is not advice on how to write, but a descriptive piece about how I actually write. But I was struck that I wrote the piece in almost completely the opposite way to how I regularly write – this one was written in one long sitting, and then edited in another long session the next day. Most of my work, as the title suggests, is written little-by-little, built up over time. The second piece is for E-IR, and is an autobiographical piece, entitled ‘Theory and Other Languages’, about how using French and some other languages has been important to my past and ongoing research. It too was written in the faster, consolidated style. That piece should be out in a week or so; the collection on writing is being produced for later this year.

The other current research task is a conference paper on ‘Foucault and Shakespeare‘, which is being slowly built up over time, in much more my usual practice.

Posted in Michel Foucault, William Shakespeare, Writing | 6 Comments

Top posts on Progressive Geographies this week

Heidegger, Axelos, Lacan et al

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