Top posts this week on Progressive Geographies

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Progressive Geographies – Frequently Asked Questions

I’ve added a page of Frequently Asked Questions to this site as a subpage to About.

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Umberto Eco – How to Write a Thesis (MIT Press)

Umberto Eco’s 1977 book How to Write a Thesis now out in translation from MIT Press.

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By the time Umberto Eco published his best-selling novel The Name of the Rose, he was one of Italy’s most celebrated intellectuals, a distinguished academic and the author of influential works on semiotics. Some years before that, in 1977, Eco published a little book for his students, How to Write a Thesis, in which he offered useful advice on all the steps involved in researching and writing a thesis—from choosing a topic to organizing a work schedule to writing the final draft. Now in its twenty-third edition in Italy and translated into seventeen languages, How to Write a Thesis has become a classic. Remarkably, this is its first, long overdue publication in English.

Eco’s approach is anything but dry and academic. He not only offers practical advice but also considers larger questions about the value of the thesis-writing exercise. How to Write a Thesis is unlike any other writing manual. It reads like a novel. It is opinionated. It is frequently irreverent, sometimes polemical, and often hilarious. Eco advises students how to avoid “thesis neurosis” and he answers the important question “Must You Read Books?” He reminds students “You are not Proust” and “Write everything that comes into your head, but only in the first draft.” Of course, there was no Internet in 1977, but Eco’s index card research system offers important lessons about critical thinking and information curating for students of today who may be burdened by Big Data.

Posted in Books, Publishing, Umberto Eco, Writing | 2 Comments

Steve Mentz, Shipwreck Modernity – forthcoming from University of Minnesota Press

MentzSteve Mentz’s Shipwreck Modernity: Ecologies of Globalization 1560-1719 is forthcoming from University of Minnesota Press. He’s posted the cover and table of contents at his blog – looking forward to this.

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Michael O’Rourke – The Nows and Thens of Queer Theory (videos)

Michael O’Rourke – The Nows and Thens of Queer Theory – videos of six lectures here.

An on-line and in residence seminar with Michael O’Rourke at UCD Humanities Institute, 9-13 February 2015. The seminar was organized by Global Centre for Advanced Studies (GCAS) in association with UCD Centre for Gender, Culture & Identities and UCD Humanities Institute. Podcasting by Real Smart Media. Also available on iTunes.

 

Posted in Conferences, Judith Butler, Michel Foucault | Tagged | Leave a comment

Textures of the Anthropocene: New four-volume set from MIT Press

This looks very interesting.

Jeremy Schmidt's avatarJeremy J Schmidt

Details of a new set of works on the Anthropocene are here.

This is a description from the MIT Press site:9780262527415_1

We have entered the Anthropocene era—a geological age of our own making, in which what we have understood to be nature is made by man. We need a new way to understand the dynamics of a new epoch. These volumes offer writings that approach the Anthropocene through the perspectives of grain, vapor, and ray—the particulate, the volatile, and the radiant. The first three volumes—each devoted to one of the three textures—offer a series of paired texts, with contemporary writers responding to historic writings. A fourth volume offers a guide to the project as a whole.

Grain: Granular materials add up to concrete forms; insignificant specks accumulate into complex entities. The texts in this volume narrate some of the fundamental qualities of the granular. In one pairing of texts…

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Gastón Gordillo – Terrain as Insurgent Weapon (abstract)

Gastón Gordillo shares an update on his ongoing work on terrain, for a forthcoming conference at UBC. Very sorry to miss this one – I’ll still be in Melbourne, talking about a related topic. Gastón and I have organised two sessions on terrain at the AAG meeting in Chicago in April, where we will be presenting our work along with a range of others (see line-up for session 1 and 2).

Below is the abstract of my essay “Terrain as Insurgent Weapon: An Affective Geometry of Combat in the Valley of Death,” which I’ll present at the workshop Space, Materiality, and Violence, at the Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies, University of British Columbia, March 20-21. This is my most thorough attempt yet to theorize terrain, based on how the mountainous terrain of the Korengal Valley, Afghanistan, affected warfare in the region. In the next few days, I’ll be posting excerpts on this blog. I’m really looking forward to this workshop, which will bring together among the best thinkers in the field, such as Eyal Weizman (our keynote speaker), Derek Gregory, Craig Jones, Caren Kaplan, Jake Kosek, Léopold Lambert, Catherine Lutz, and Shaylih Muehlmann.

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Brad Evans reviews Michael Dillon’s Biopolitics of Security at Antipode

Biopolitics of SecurityBrad Evans reviews Michael Dillon’s Biopolitics of Security: A Political Analytic of Finitude at Antipode.

I’m looking forward to seeing this book when back in the UK.

Posted in Michael Dillon, Michel Foucault, Politics | Leave a comment

iBorder, Borderscapes, Bordering: A Conversation – Chiara Brambilla and Holger Pötzsch

A discussion extending the work of a recent article in Society and Space – open access for a month alongside this open site piece.

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Foucault and the History of Our Present (2015)

A new (expensive) collection of essays on Foucault, with introduction free to download.

Clare O'Farrell's avatarFoucault News

fuggle1Foucault and the History of Our Present, edited by Sophie Fuggle, Yari Lanci, and Martina Tazzioli

ISBN 9781137385918
Publication Date February 2015
Formats Hardcover Ebook (EPUB) Ebook (PDF)
Publisher Palgrave Macmillan

PDF of flyer

PDF of front matter and intro

According to philosopher Michel Foucault, the ‘history of the present’ should constitute the starting point for any enquiry into the past and a critical ontology of ourselves. This book comprises a series of essays all centring on the question of the present or, rather, multiple presents which compose contemporary experience. The collection brings together philosophical readings of Foucault which try to rework his thought in light of our present, together with practical analyses of our own moment which draw on his methodological approaches to questions of power, knowledge and subjectivity. Covering a range of topics including freedom, politics, ethics, security, war, migration, incarceration, the sociology and political economy of…

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