‘Hellenistic Ethics from Nietzsche to Foucault’ – Warwick, 25-27 September 2014

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Prospects for an Ethics of Self-Cultivation: Hellenistic Ethics from Nietzsche to Foucault, University of Warwick, 25-27 September 2014 – full details here

Philosophical interest in the ethical ideal of self-cultivation has increased in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries as philosophers have sought alternatives to deontological and utilitarian theories. This interest has been most evident in the widespread revival of virtue ethics, although contemporary virtue ethicists tend to focus on Aristotle’s account of character formation. Philosophers in the modern European tradition, however, have been influenced by other views on self-cultivation from the Hellenistic period. Nietzsche’s account of self-cultivation, for instance, is closer to Epicurus’s than Aristotle’s, while Foucault draws extensively on Stoicism and Cynicism for his account. The insights of these thinkers suggest that we may deepen and expand our understanding of self-cultivation by reassessing the merits of the Hellenistic tradition.

Posted in Conferences, Friedrich Nietzsche, Michel Foucault | 1 Comment

Feeling the Anthropocene: Air, Rock, Flesh – Edinburgh, 28 Nov 2014

Feeling the Anthropocene: Air, Rock, Flesh

Symposium: University of Edinburgh

11:00-17:00 Friday 28 November 2014

Not only has the Earth become sensitive to the activities of humans, or rather certain strata of humanity, but increasingly, ways of life­—human and more-than-human alike—under late capitalism have become increasingly sensitive to Earth forces.

How do we sense the Anthropocene? What might a politics that feels the Earth look like? What does it mean that the Earth feels us? The symposium will examine such questions—and others—through three elements that tie life together: air, rock, and flesh.

Speakers

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AIR

Bronislaw Szerszynski  |  Lancaster University | Life in the open air

ROCK

Ilana Halperin | Artist  | “Learning to read rocks”

FLESH

Jamie Lorimer  | Oxford University |“Probiotic political ecologies and the futures of life

 

Further details here.

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Further details of Harvard events on Baghdad and Lefebvre now available

I’ll be speaking at two events at Harvard next month. Details of the conference “Identity, Sovereignty, and Global Politics in the Building of Baghdad: From Revolution through the Gulf War and Beyond” are available here; and of the book launch event for Henri Lefebvre’s Toward an Architecture of Enjoyment, “Architectural Imagination After May ’68: Lukasz Stanek in conversation with Neil Brenner, Eve Blau, Michael Hays, Tom Conley, and Stuart Elden” here.

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Laleh Khalili – A Habit of Destruction

A powerful commentary on Gaza at the Society and Space open site by Laleh Khalili.

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Everyday utopias and dystopias

Two new reviews on the Society and Space open site.

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Top posts on Progressive Geographies this week

Where to start with reading Henri Lefebvre?

10 Stunning Writing Studios

Reading guides to Lefebvre and Sloterdijk in English updated

Where to start with reading Peter Sloterdijk?

Adam Kotsko, Agamben translator, on ‘The experience of translating’

Articles and Chapters

Upcoming talks – Harvard, Groningen, Basel

Israel-Palestine virtual theme issue

Books received – Foucault’s collaborative projects, Essential Foucault and Dealing with Darwin

Dynamic Territories – my reflection on the Ice Law project website

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10 Stunning Writing Studios

Interesting designs for places in which to write…

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Généalogie des équipements de normalisation: Les équipements sanitaires – one of Foucault’s collaborative projects

Généalogie des équipementsI’ve been looking for a copy of this study for a while – Généalogie des équipements de normalisation: Les équipements sanitaires – and then a couple of copies turned up on-line in good condition and for a reasonable price. I may say more about the content in a future post, but these are the key aspects:

This is one of three volumes published by CERFI under the general title of Généalogie des équipements collectifs – the others are on schools and infrastructure. They are really research reports rather than books. I have a copy of one of the others, but the other is difficult to find – very few libraries have copies. Worldcat has the current volume also listed as Généalogie des équipements collectifs [2] Les équipements sanitaires. This record suggests that the general title of this volume is Généalogie des équipements de normalisation, but that that the series of three has the title Généalogie des équipements collectifs. Given other information (pages, date, publisher) are the same I am fairly confident these are not different texts, but library catalogues can be misleading.

This volume is 440 pages, itself in three parts, only one of which is ‘sous la direction de Michel Foucault’, entitled L’institution hospitalière au XVIIIe siècle. The other parts are on psychiatry and mental health and are authored, rather than edited.

The first part on hospitals contains Foucault’s essay ‘La politique de la santé au XVIIIe siècle’, which also appeared in the collection Les machines à guériroriginally published in 1976 and in a revised version in 1979.

The rest of the first part comprises some really interesting material, about seventy pages in length, but with no authors listed. Foucault’s chapter is signed; the rest is the product of a team of researchers led by Foucault. I’ve never seen the latter text before – I hadn’t expected this much new material. This will take some time to digest, and will require some changes to my discussion of this collaborative work in Chapter Six of Foucault’s Last Decade.

The 1976 date of this report, and the fact that this contains ‘La politique de la santé au XVIIIe siècle’ has led to confusions in some bibliographies or books on Foucault (i.e. David Macey, The Lives of Michel Foucault, p. 522 n. 12), which misled me in previous work. I suggested that Les machines à guérir (1979) was a re-edition of Généalogie des équipements de normalisation: Les équipements sanitaires. I can now definitively say that this is not the case. Généalogie des équipements de normalisation: Les équipements sanitaires is a separate study and there was a 1976 edition of Les machines à guérir – the only overlap between them is the single essay by Foucault. Foucault’s essay was extensively revised between 1976 and the 1979 edition of Les machines à guérir, but so too was the rest of the volume. I’ve only done a cursory comparison of the other chapters so far, but one is slightly revised; two are comprehensively revised; and one is entirely different, with a new title. There are also differences to the dossier and plates between the two editions. As far as I am aware, none of the seventy pages of extra material in L’institution hospitalière au XVIIIe siècle appears anywhere else.

Until recently, only the 1976 version of Foucault’s chapter wasavailable in English translation, as ‘The Politics of Health in the Eighteenth Century’ (originally in Power/Knowledge, and reprinted in other places). The 1979 version is now available as Michel Foucault, “The Politics of Health in the Eighteenth Century”, translated by Richard A. Lynch, Foucault Studies, No 18, 2014, pp. 113-27. As far as I can tell none of the other chapters are available in translation.

I’ve put together a detailed bibliography of all these collaborative projects – now available here.

Posted in Foucault's Last Decade, Michel Foucault, Publishing | 1 Comment

Shakespeare & Philosophy Conference (Sept. 12th and 13th, 2014) – University of Hertfordshire

Interesting conference coming up in September.

patriciamarechal's avatar>> Ordinary Language Philosophy & Literary Studies 2009-2017 <<

Titled Shakespeare: The Philosopher, this conference will be devoted to exploring Shakespeare’s contribution to philosophy. The event will take place at the University of Hertfordshire inShakespeare_Portrait_Comparisons_2 England.

‘Shakespeare’s work is rich in philosophical themes, addressing questions in areas including metaphysics, ethics, philosophy of mind, and social and political philosophy. Meanwhile, issues concerning how Shakespeare’s works manage to represent what they do are ripe for consideration in aesthetics, with the plays raising questions about the nature of representation, fiction, interpretation, literature and history, tragedy and comedy. Shakespeare: The Philosopher aims to explore the importance of philosophy in understanding Shakespeare, and the importance of Shakespeare to issues in philosophy.’

Program

Friday 12th September

10:00-11:00 Greg Currie (York) Title: tbc

11:00-12:00 Katie Brennan (Temple University) ‘Tragic Knowledge: Reading Nietzsche through Shakespeare’

12:00-13:00 Lunch

13:00-14:00 Miranda Anderson (Edinburgh) ‘Extending the Self in Shakespeare’

14:00-15:00 Sophie Battell (Cardiff) ‘Shakespeare, Derrida, and Cosmopolitanism’

15:00-15:30 Break

15:30-16:30 Derek…

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Upcoming talks – Harvard, Groningen, Basel

I have three visiting lectures coming up over the next couple of months.

In mid-September, I’ll be speaking at a conference on ‘Identity, Sovereignty, and Global Politics in the Building of Baghdad: From Revolution through the Gulf War and Beyond‘ at the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University. I’ll be part of an opening plenary session on ‘War and Urbanism’ that seeks to situate the conference itself in a wider context. My paper is tentatively titled ‘Crises of Territorial Integrity: Iraq and Nigeria’ and I’ll try to relate Boko Haram and the Islamic State to some of the arguments I made in Terror and Territory and my ongoing work on urban territory. While there I’ll be taking part in some other events, including a discussion with Neil Brenner’s Urban Theory Lab and a book launch for Henri Lefebvre’s Towards an Architecture of Enjoyment with Neil, Tom Conley, Łukasz Stanek and others (further details here).

Only a couple of days after I get back from the US I’ll be heading to Holland to give the second Groningen lecture on Modes of Reasoning. I’ve mentioned this previously on this blog. The title will be ‘Globe, Governmentality, Geopolitics’ – a developed version of a talk I gave in Waterloo and Zurich last year. There will be a follow-up seminar the next day.

In November I’ll be giving another version of that material at the New Developments in Theory lecture at the University of Basel, under the title ‘Geopolitics, Geopower, Geometrics’. There will be a workshop the following day on ‘Space, Territory, Literature‘ at which some of my work on Shakespeare will be discussed, along with graduate student presentations.

None of these talks are on Foucault – though the Groningen and Basel ones will mention him. I’m still working hard on the Foucault’s Last Decade manuscript, though I’ll have to put it aside for a while to write these papers. I’m hoping to finish the draft of Chapter Seven before term starts though.

All the details of forthcoming talks are here.

Posted in Conferences, Foucault's Last Decade, Henri Lefebvre, Michel Foucault, Neil Brenner, Politics, Shakespearean Territories, Territory, Terror and Territory, Travel, urban/urbanisation, William Shakespeare | 3 Comments