Video: David Harvey’s Seventeen Contradictions and the End of Capitalism (AAG 2015)

Video of the discussion of David Harvey’s Seventeen Contradictions… at the Chicago AAG.

https://youtu.be/kHobOMn_UkQ

Keith Harris's avatarMy Desiring-Machines

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Book review essay – “Geographies of Peace”

Fiona McConnell, Nick Megoran and Philippa Williams’s edited collection Geographies of Peace is reviewed by Jenna Loyd at the Antipode site.

Antipode Editorial Office's avatarAntipodeFoundation.org

Fiona McConnell, Nick Megoran and Philippa Williams (eds), Geographies of Peace, London: I.B.Tauris, 2014. ISBN: 9781780761435 (cloth)

Reviewed by Jenna M. Loyd, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

***A pdf version of this essay is available here***

The lyncher and the atom bomber are related. The first cannot murder unpunished and unrebuked without so encouraging the latter that the peace of the world and the lives of millions are endangered.

 – Civil Rights Congress (1951) “We Charge Genocide petition.”

Peace is an enduring concern among geographers whose discipline has been so complicit in conquest, territorial and geopolitical hegemony, war, and racism. Elisée Reclus, for example, wrote in 1898 that “the words ‘order’ and ‘social peace’ sound quite beautiful to our ears, but we would like to know what these noble apostles, the rulers, mean by these words. Yes, peace and order are great ideals that deserve to be realized…

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Towards a Comprehensive Michel Serres primary bibliography (4): single-authored articles

Christopher Watkin’s bibliography of Michel Serres’s work continues…

Christopher Watkin's avatarChristopher Watkin

As before, let me know if you spot anything I’ve missed…

(1961). “Descartes et Leibniz dans les deux manières de penser le réel et la science.” Critique no. 164. Hors série.

(1963). “La Querelle des anciens et des modernes en mathématiques et en épistémologie.” Critique, no. 198. Hors série.

(1965). “Un modèle mathématique du cogito.” Revue Philosophique de la France et de l’Étranger 155: 197-205.

(1965). Review of Paul Ver Eecke, Les « Coniques » d’Apollonius de Perge. Revue Philosophique de la France et de l’Étranger 155: 256-57.

(1966). “Don Juan au palais des merveilles: sur les statues au XVIIe siècle.” Les Études philosophiques 21, no. 3: l’athéisme: 385-90.

(1966). “Etablissement, par nombres et figures, de l’Harmonie préétablie.” Revue Internationale de Philosophie 20, no. 76/77: 216-27.

(1966). “Le troisième homme ou le tiers exclu.” Les Études philosophiques 21, no. 4: 463-69.

(1966). “Pénélope ou d’un graphe théorique.” Revue…

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Divisions of Life

Derek Gregory shares some of the striking images from his AAG paper, along with discussion of the issues raised.

Derek Gregory's avatargeographical imaginations

Journeys from No Man's Land.001

My main presentation at the AAG in Chicago was part of a session organised by Noam Leshem and Alasdair Pinkerton on Remnants of No Man’s Land: history, theory and excess (more on their larger project here).  Here is an extended summary of what I had to say, together with some of my slides, but bear in mind that this all had to be done in 20 minutes so there wasn’t much room for nuance.  Neither was there time to discuss civilian entanglements, both volunteers and victims, nor the sick: the presentation focuses on the wounded, even though the problems of trench foot, ‘trench flu’, and a host of other diseases were also extremely important.  They do all receive attention in the larger project from which this is extracted.  One last, geographical qualification: my discussion is limited to the evacuation of British and imperial troops from the Western Front.

My…

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Getting a grip on the vacant housing problem (plus: urban geology!)

The emergence of ‘urban geologist’ as a new subfield?

David Wachsmuth's avatarDavid Wachsmuth

Urban geologist? What's that? Urban geologist? What’s that?

A new City of Vancouver proposal to start addressing the city’s scourge of speculation-driven housing vacancy is in the news. The municipal government wants to comprehensively identify vacant houses throughout the city, building on important work being done by the grassroots group Beautiful Empty Homes but leveraging governmental data (namely from BC Hydro) that the public doesn’t have access to.

I spoke to a number of news outlets about the proposal yesterday, starting with the Vancouver Sun, which focused on the spectre of xenophobia in discussions of Vancouver’s expensive property market. As I argued, though, the major issue here isn’t whether it’s foreigners buying houses or other Canadians, it’s that Vancouver’s housing market isn’t strongly connected to the local economy, and speculators buying properties but not living in them just makes that problem worse:

“The problem in Vancouver is that demand for housing doesn’t have that…

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Politics, Diaspora, and Armenian Genocide Recognition

A piece on the Armenian genocide by my colleague Maria Koinova.

politicsreconsidered's avatarPolitics Reconsidered

genocide memorial

By Maria Koinova

The centennial of the 1915 Armenian genocide has gained global attention during the past month. One hundred years ago on April 24, the Young Turk regime of the collapsing Ottoman Empire started to round up and either eventually massacre or expose to an imminent death in the Syrian desert an estimated 800,000 to 1.5 million Armenians. One hundred years later, the Armenian genocide is recognized as such by the European Parliament, the parliaments or governments of 23 countries, among numerous key institutions and political figures, such as Pope Francis of the Catholic Church. But it is still officially denied as “genocide” by the successor state of the Ottoman Empire, Turkey, despite a growing movement for genocide recognition within its own civil society.

The centennial commemorations raise questions beyond much discussed concerns as to whether demands for genocide recognition will help Armenia and Turkey to improve their politically…

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Review of Jerusalem Unbound

Oren Shlomo reviews Michael Dumper’s book Jerusalem Unbound on the Society and Space open site.

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A wet world: rethinking place, territory and time – Kimberley Peters and Philip Steinberg

A stunning photo essay by Philip Steinberg and Kimberley Peters, first presented at the AAG in Chicago, to accompany their recent Society and Space paper – the paper itself is open access for one month.

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Towards a Comprehensive Michel Serres primary bibliography (3): archival material

Part 3 of the Michel Serres bibliography.

Christopher Watkin's avatarChristopher Watkin

Here is the latest instalment of the comprehensive Michel Serres primary bibliography: archival material. Archival material about but not written by Michel Serres is not included in this list, which gives a tantalizing glimpse into Serres’ early thought and intellectual formation.

Serres, Michel. (Undated). “Essai sur le concept épistémologique d’interférence”. Thèse complémentaire présentée à la Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines de Paris-Sorbonne. 217 pages. Archives et manuscrits conservés à l’École normale supérieure: Fonds Hyppolite.  http://www.calames.abes.fr/pub/ms/Calames-20131241612190693

—.  (Undated). “1 lettre de Michel Serres envoyée à Robert Flacelière”. feuillet. 135 x 210 mm. Sur papier à en-tête Université de Clermont, Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines, Institut de Philosophie. Archives et manuscrits conservés à l’École normale supérieure : Fonds Hyppolite. http://www.calames.abes.fr/pub/ms/Calames-20131119111157328292

—.  (Undated). “1 lettre de Michel Serres envoyée à Marguerite Hyppolite”. 1 feuillet. 210 x 270 mm. Archives et manuscrits conservés à l’École normale supérieure : Fonds Hyppolite. http://www.calames.abes.fr/pub/ms/Calames-2013112616115165623

—.  (Undated). “Michel Serres, 1 lettre”…

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Foucault’s Théories et institutions pénales – forthcoming in May 2015

Foucault’s 1971-72 course at the Collège de France, Théories et institutions pénales, is forthcoming in May 2015. This is the last of the courses to be published, though I understand some courses from elsewhere may appear in the future. The publication has slipped a few days from previous announcements. The EHESS page now has more details, including this description.

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« Ce qui caractérise l’acte de justice, ce n’est pas le recours à un tribunal et à des juges ; ce n’est pas l’intervention des magistrats (même s’ils devaient être de simples médiateurs ou arbitres). Ce qui caractérise l’acte juridique, le processus ou la procédure au sens large, c’est le développement réglé d’un litige. Et dans ce développement, l’intervention des juges, leur avis ou leur décision n’est jamais qu’un épisode. C’est la manière dont on s’affronte, la manière dont on lutte qui définit
l’ordre juridique. La règle et la lutte, la règle dans la lutte, c’est cela le juridique. »
Michel Foucault

Théories et Institutions pénales est le titre donné par Michel Foucault au cours qu’il prononce au Collège de France de novembre 1971 à mars 1972. Dans ces leçons, Michel Foucault théorise, pour la première fois, la question du pouvoir qui va l’occuper jusqu’à la rédaction de Surveiller et punir (1975) et au-delà, d’abord à travers la relation minutieuse de la répression par Richelieu de la révolte des Nu-pieds (1639-1640), puis en montrant comment le dispositif de pouvoir élaboré à cette occasion par la monarchie rompt avec l’économie des institutions juridiques et judiciaires du Moyen Âge et ouvre sur un « appareil judiciaire d’État », un « système répressif » dont la fonction va se centrer sur l’enfermement de ceux qui défient son ordre. Michel Foucault systématise l’approche d’une histoire de la vérité à partir de l’étude des « matrices juridico-politiques », étude qu’il avait commencée dans le cours de l’année précédente (Leçons sur la volonté de savoir), et qui est au coeur de la notion de « relation de savoir-pouvoir ». Ce cours développe sa théorie de la justice et du droit pénal. La parution de ce volume marque la fin de la publication de la série des Cours de Michel Foucault au Collège de France (dont le premier volume a été publié en 1997).

An English translation will be forthcoming in a couple of years. I’ll be speaking on this course in Nottingham in September, and it will be fundamental to my forthcoming book Foucault: The Birth of Power. Thanks to Marcelo Hoffman for the link.

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