Balibar, Equaliberty and Rancière Now reviewed at NDPR

978-0-8223-5564-9_pr0745662560

 

 

 

 

 

 

Two interesting reviews at NDPR: Étienne Balibar, Equaliberty: Political Essays reviewed by Jonathan Joseph; and Oliver Davis (ed.), Rancière Now reviewed by Samuel A. Chambers.

Posted in Books, Etienne Balibar, Jacques Rancière | 1 Comment

The Revolution in Military Affairs: A Partial Timeline (+links)

A very helpful resource

edmundberger's avatarDeterritorial Investigations

1-DsQVZN-wu89sU1xgHjIQ6w“A Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) is a major change in the nature of warfare brought about by the innovative application of new technologies which, combined with dramatic changes in military doctrine and operational and organisational concepts, fundamentally alters the character and conduct of military operations.” – Andrew Marshall

“The RMA depends not only on technological developments, such as computer and information systems, but also on the new forms of labor – mobile, flexible, immaterial forms of social labor… In these respects RMA is an anticipation and an extrapolation of the recent transformations of social labor, casting the economic figures into the field of battle.” – Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, Multitude

1946

194?

  • Andrew Marshall graduates with a degree in economics at the University of Chicago.

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Getting Published Masterclass and chairing Ian Kershaw

Very enjoyable day at the Getting Published Masterclass, sponsored by the British Academy and organised by my colleague Christopher Moran. A real privilege to introduce and chair Ian Kershaw‘s keynote on ‘a life in writing’. As I said at the event, something like this would have been really useful for me fifteen years ago, but still much to learn. Particularly enjoyed the session on media work, publicity and having a literary agent.

Posted in Conferences, Publishing | 1 Comment

A Conversation between Stuart Elden and Babette Babich – Fordham University video

In the Fordham University studio copyA Conversation between Stuart Elden and Babette Babich

A long discussion at the Fordham University television studios – ranges across my work and lots of topics, including territory today and historically, Lefebvre, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Foucault, Shakespeare… Many thanks to Babette for this invitation.

 

Posted in Babette Babich, Boundaries, Foucault's Last Decade, Henri Lefebvre, Mapping the Present, Martin Heidegger, Michel Foucault, My Publications, Politics, Publishing, Shakespearean Territories, Speaking Against Number, Territory, Terror and Territory, The Birth of Territory, Theory, Understanding Henri Lefebvre, William Shakespeare | 2 Comments

Boko Haram annotated bibliography updated – now 114 entries

Armoured Car, Maitama district, Abuja – photo by S. Elden

An newly updated version of my annotated bibliography of literature on Boko Haram – nine new entries, taking the total to 114. The page the link takes you to have the most up-to-date version as pdf, along with a few notes. The most recent additions are Ayoola & Olaosun 2014; Gilbert 2014; Giroux & Gilpin 2014; Golwa & Alozieuwa 2012; Ingram 2008; Okai 2014; Onuoha; Zenn 2014, Zenn & Pearson 2014.

Comments or additions welcome – I hope people find this useful. Please consider publicising this in your networks – the point of this is to help provide a more informed view.

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Foucault’s Lectures on Subjectivity and Truth, X

Lecture 10

Barry Stocker's avatarStockerblog

Lecture of 18th March, 1981

The same code of prohibitions and permissions in sexual ethics is present in the later Stoics and other Graeco-Roman thinkers of the first and second centuries as in the Christian thought of Augustine, of Christianity as it developed from the the fourth century. However, the philosophical and religious discourse was very different. For Augustine the end of marriage and sexual activity is procreation but not out of hıman solidarity. It is further the perfection, which will bring about the return of Christ and to assist the other marital partner in avoiding sin (presumably the sin of non-martial sexual activity).

We should not see the Graeco-Roman intensification of the ideal of marriage as not just the phenomenon of a small elite, but as part of increasing practices and gradual success in imposing the intensification. This leads Foucault into some discussion of the relation between discourse and…

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Books received – Avila, Axelos, Bleiker, Branch, Tribe

books received 25 June 2014A few books received – Kostas Axelos’s final two books; Keith Tribe’s classic Land, Labour and Economic Discourse; Eric Avila, The Folklore of the Freeway; Roland Bleiker’s Aesthetics and World Politics; Jordan Branch’s The Cartographic State – and a pile of journals received over the last few weeks.

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How Important Are Library Sales to the University Press? One Case Study

Interesting thoughts (and data from University of Chicago Press) on book publishing and library sales.

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Metrics: An Addendum on RAE / REF

More thoughts on metrics and research assessment at The Disorder of Things.

Meera's avatarThe Disorder Of Things

Not everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that can be counted counts...

We have had overwhelming support from a wide range of academics for our paper on why metrics are inappropriate for assessing research quality (200+ as of June 22nd). However, some have also posed interesting follow-up questions on the blog and by email which are worth addressing in more depth. These are more REF-specific on the whole and relate to the relationship between the flaws in the current system and the flaws in the proposed system. In my view the latter still greatly outweigh the former but it is useful to reflect on them both.

Current REF assessment processes are unaccountable and subjective; aren’t metrics a more transparent, public and objective way of assessing research?

The current REF involves, as the poser of the question pointed out, small groups of people deliberating behind closed doors and destroying all evidence of their deliberations. The point about the non-transparency and unaccountability…

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Foucault’s Lectures on Subjectivity and Truth, IX

Barry Stocker’s reading continues

Barry Stocker's avatarStockerblog

Lecture of 11th March, 1981

Marriage was institutionalised as a public union by Greeks in pre-Roman Egypt (where there was a considerable Greek influence from Alexander the Great’s conquest and from the Macedonian-Greek dynasty of one of Alexander’s generals that ruled Egypt after the death of Alexander. The Augustan laws against adultery followed on from this practice, reinforcing it (is the implication that it had spread from Egypt to Rome, with Egypt only becoming Roman in Augustus’ time, under the very direct control of the Emperor compared with other provinces, as a result of the defeat of Mark Anthony and Cleopatra, or is the implication that there were parallel developments in Rome to those in Egypt?).

In Egypt, Foucault refers to the original public marriage contracts as concerned with establishing that the wife can only leave the home with the husband’s permission and is absolutely forbidden to have extra-martial liaisons…

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