Philosophy, Politics, and History in the Thought of Gramsci, 18-19 June 2015. King’s College London

Screen Shot 2015-06-05 at 14.24.53Philosophy, Politics, and History in the Thought of Gramsci, 18-19 June 2015. King’s College London.

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Babette Babich, “Heidegger’s Black Night: The Nachlass & its Wirkungsgeschichte” on academia.edu

Babette Babich, “Heidegger’s Black Night: The Nachlass & its Wirkungsgeschichte” on academia.edu – another essay from the forthcoming collection Ingo Farin and Jeff Malpas, eds., Reading Heidegger’s Black Notebooks 1931-1941 (Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 2016).

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The Anomie of the Earth: Philosophy, Politics, and Autonomy in Europe and the Americas

The Anomie of the Earth: Philosophy, Politics, and Autonomy in Europe and the Americas – new collection from Duke University Press. Includes essays by Sandro Mezzadra, Walter  D. Mignolo, Benjamin Noys and others.

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The contributors to The Anomie of the Earth explore the convergences and resonances between Autonomist Marxism and decolonial thinking. In discussing and rejecting Carl Schmitt’s formulation of the nomos—a conceptualization of world order based on the Western tenets of law and property—the authors question the assumption of universal political subjects and look towards politics of the commons divorced from European notions of sovereignty. They contrast European Autonomism with North and South American decolonial and indigenous conceptions of autonomy, discuss the legacies of each, and examine social movements in the Americas and Europe. Beyond orthodox Marxism, their transatlantic exchanges point to the emerging categories disclosed by the collapse of the colonial and capitalist frameworks of Western modernity.

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Martin Heidegger’s 1934-35 course Hölderlin’s Hymns “Germania” and “The Rhine” reviewed at NDPR by Richard Polt

9780253014214_medThe translation of Martin Heidegger’s 1934-35 lecture course Hölderlin’s Hymns “Germania” and “The Rhine”, is reviewed at NDPR by Richard Polt. The translators are William McNeill and Julia Ireland, also responsible for the translation of Heidegger’s course on Hölderlin’s Hymn ‘The Ister’Polt confronts the political issues with Heidegger directly in his review, and Julia Ireland’s article ‘Naming Φύσις and the “Inner Truth of National Socialism”: A New Archival Discovery’ which is referred to in the review, is available open access here.

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Reviews of Foucault’s first three Collège de France courses, and other pieces at Berfrois

1024px-Sebastiaan_Vrancx_studio_-_A_landscape_with_travellers_ambushed_outside_a_small_town-725x450The piece I published yesterday was on Foucault’s second lecture course at the Collège de France. I have also published reviews of the first and third, which form an initial triptych on the linked themes of measure, inquiry and examination.

Update September 2025: the Berfrois site is now closed and the archive has been removed. My piece can now be found at the updated links below. All my pieces are listed here.

Power, Nietzsche and the Greeks: Foucault’s Leçons sur la volonté de savoir(1970-71).

Peasant Revolts, Germanic Law and the Medieval Inquiry” on Théories et institutions pénales (1971-72).

“Discipline, Punish, Examine and Produce: Foucault’s La société punitive” (1972-73).

These three courses will be a major focus of the second of the books I’m currently writing on Foucault, The Birth of Power.

With Berfrois I have also published a piece on the 1979-80 course at the Collège, On the Government of the Living, and the  1981 course at Louvain, Wrong-Doing, Truth-Telling: Confession, Flesh, Power and Truth.

And finally I’ve also written for them on Kant’s Natural Science and Ralph Fiennes’s film of Shakespeare’s Coriolanus.

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Thinking Spatial Practices with & against law – Birkbeck, 19 June 2015

Thinking Spatial Practices with & against law

An Interdisciplinary Workshop Funded by: Birkbeck Institute for Social Research

Birkbeck School of Law, University of London, 19th June 2015

Birkbeck College, Malet Street│Room 414

Across various disciplines, a resurgent interest in questions of spatial justice is prompted by a diverse range of developments such as the Arab Spring and occupy movements, drone warfare, the criminalisation of squatting in Europe, restriction of the uses of public space under securitisation, surveillance and disciplinary architecture, the housing crisis in the UK and elsewhere.

This interdisciplinary colloquium explores the specific role of law, not only in terms of its functions of disciplining, ordering and controlling, but also in terms of the possibilities it offers for critical spatial practices. Law holds a special relationship to spatiality as the latter is ingrained in its historical formation and logics of ordering and control.

At the intersection with approaches that focus predominantly on the so-called negative effects of legal spatial ordering and control, and posit themselves as working against the law, we would like to also consider what positive markers may be offered in the law and with the law in such modalities of spatial practice and thought. And this not only in the sense of legal doctrinal possibilities and established jurisprudence, but crucially so in terms of encountering the creative force of the (legal, political and architectural) imagination.

PLEASE REGISTER HERE:

Programme and Abstracts here:

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Notes toward a critical history of cartography, part 1

Jeremy Crampton on an interesting teaching/research project on the history of cartography.

Jeremy's avatarOpen Geography

In the past few months I’ve agreed to develop a course called “A Critical History of Cartography” for our department’s new Masters and Certificate in Digital Mapping. This initiative, which we call New Maps Plus, will offer interested students the ability to earn a Certificate or a Masters of Science from the University of Kentucky in subjects covering digital mapping, GIS, the geoweb, and programming for online maps.

One of the things I proposed for this course was to develop a Reader in Critical Cartography, which would collect in one place, with short commentary, the people, events, maps and theory that had a profound influence on the way we think about maps, or conversely, the way maps may have made us see the world in new ways. This book would then be the assigned reading for the course but would also I hope be of interest to a wider…

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Review essay of Michel Foucault, Théories et institutions pénales: Cours au Collège de France 1971-1972 at Berfrois

Update September 2025: the Berfrois site is now closed and the archive has been removed. My piece can now be found here.

My review essay of Michel Foucault, Théories et institutions pénales: Cours au Collège de France 1971-1972, edited by Bernard Harcourt, has just been published at Berfrois as “Peasant Revolts, Germanic Law and the Medieval Inquiry“.

nu-pieds

Foucault remains full of surprises. This course, Théories et institutions pénales (“Penal Theories and Institutions”), was the second he delivered as Professor of the History of Systems of Thought at the Collège de France. In it, he discusses two main historical themes: popular revolts in seventeenth century France, and medieval practices of inquiry and ordeal. The second theme relates to Foucault’s longstanding interest in what he called the ‘politics of truth’. From courses given in Rio de Janeiro in 1973 and Louvain in 1981, it is clear Foucault saw the medieval period as crucial to that story (a review of the second appeared in Berfrois last year). He said in Brazil that “one could write an entire history of torture, as situated between the procedure of the ordeal and inquiry”. But only now do we have the sustained study of the inquiry that those two later courses drew upon. The first theme merely receives hints elsewhere. Foucault’s example is the Nu-pieds (“bare feet”) revolts of 1639-40 in Normandy. Given that Foucault is often criticised 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 course provides an important corrective. (continues here)

One of the reasons I like writing for Berfrois is that they are quick. The course was published on 15 May; I turned in my review on 28 May; we agreed a few small changes on 29 May and it’s online on 2 June. And it’s available open access.

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Stepping down as Society and Space: Environment and Planning D editor

epdI have recently come to the end of my time as an editor of Society and Space: Environment and Planning D. I took over from Gerry Pratt in autumn 2006, officially becoming editor with the first issue of 2007. The continuing editors – Deborah Cowen, Natalie Oswin and Mary Thomas – have written a very generous piece for the open site about this transition. It draws on my opening editorial back in 2007 and discusses what we’ve achieved since then, and a little on their plans for the future.

In addition, Sage have recently bought Pion, publisher of the Environment and Planning series, so this is a time of much change for the journal (more on the sale at The Bookseller). It’s in excellent hands with Deb, Natalie and Mary, and they will be appointing a new editor and review editors shortly. I’ll be continuing an involvement with the journal as an ‘honorary editor’ – joining Michael Dear, Gerry Pratt and Nigel Thrift – and as editor of a ‘Society and Space’ book series with Sage.

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Please donate to Punctum Books – open-access does not mean no production costs

Sharing the appeal from Punctum Books. I’ve donated a little in the past, but it’s surprising how few people do. Books cannot be produced for zero cost. I’ve shared lots of links to their books in the past, have contributed to one, and have pieces in two forthcoming collections. But I’m also a reader. Please take a look at their wonderful collection, but please do consider a donation.

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Every time someone downloads a book from punctum’s website, they see a pop-up window that asks them to consider donating something (no matter how small) for the gift of all of these free books and cultural resources, but less than 2% of all readers actually make a donation (but: THANK YOU beautiful 2-percent-ers!). We understand that to really work any stream of donations, you have to be aggressive, although in our already overly crowd-sourced and attention-compromised world,… we despair a little at our needing to be shouted at above and through the madding fray. That said, if you care about and/or have benefited in any way from punctum books, and/or you simply want to support the cause of Open Access publishing (which also means to support the cause of more authors having access to the means of publication, not just supporting the cause of readers having more access to more titles), please consider helping punctum in one of 2 ways — by actually making a donation, or purchasing one or more of our titles in print. VIVE LA OPEN ACCESS! http://punctumbooks.com/category/titles/

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