Politics, Metaphysics, and Death

Politics, Metaphysics, and Death

Essays on Giorgio Agamben's Homo Sace

  • Autor: Norris, Andrew; Wall, Thomas Carl; Fitzpatrick, Peter; Vogt, Erik; Kalyvas, Andreas
  • Editor: Duke University Press
  • ISBN: 9780822335252
  • eISBN Pdf: 9780822386735
  • Lloc de publicació:  Durham , United States
  • Any de publicació digital: 2005
  • Mes: Juliol
  • Pàgines: 320
  • DDC: 320/.01
  • Idioma: Anglés
The Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben is having an increasingly significant impact on Anglo-American political theory. His most prominent intervention to date is the powerful reassessment of sovereignty and the politics of life and death laid out in his multivolume Homo Sacer project. Agamben argues that in both the modern world and the ancient, politics inevitably involves a sovereign decision that bans some individuals from the political and human communities. For Agamben, the Nazi concentration camps—in which some inmates are reduced to a form of living death—are not a political aberration but instead the place where this essential political decision about life most clearly reveals itself. Engaging specifically with Homo Sacer, the essays in this collection draw out and contend with the wide-ranging implications of Agamben’s radical and controversial interpretation of modern political life.

The contributors analyze Agamben’s thought from the perspectives of political theory, philosophy, jurisprudence, and the history of law. They consider his work not only in relation to that of his major interlocutors—Hannah Arendt, Michel Foucault, Carl Schmitt, Walter Benjamin, and Martin Heidegger—but also in relation to the thought of Plato, Pindar, Heraclitus, Descartes, Kafka, Bataille, and Derrida. The essayists’ approaches are varied, as are their ultimate evaluations of the cogency and accuracy of Agamben’s arguments. This volume also includes an original essay by Agamben in which he considers the relation of Benjamin’s “Critique of Violence” to Schmitt’s Political Theology. Politics, Metaphysics, and Death is a necessary, multifaceted exposition and evaluation of the thought of one of today’s most important political theorists.

Contributors: Giorgio Agamben, Andrew Benjamin, Peter Fitzpatrick, Anselm Haverkamp, Paul Hegarty, Andreas Kalyvas, Rainer Maria Kiesow , Catherine Mills, Andrew Norris, Adam Thurschwell, Erik Vogt, Thomas Carl Wall

  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Giorgio Agamben and the Politics of the Living Dead by Andrew Norris
  • Au Hasard by Thomas Carl Wall
  • Bare Sovereignty: Homo Sacer and the Insistance of Law by Peter Fitzpatrick
  • S/Citing the Camp by Erik Vogt
  • The Sovereign Weaver: Beyond the Camp by Andreas Kalyvas
  • Anagrammatics of Violence: The Benjaminian Ground of Homo Sacer by Anselm Haverkamp
  • Spacing as the Shared: Heraclitus, Pindar, Agamben by Andrew Benjamin
  • Cutting the Branches for Akiba: Agamben's Critique of Derrida by Adam Thurschwell
  • Linguistic Survival and Ethicality: Biopolitics, Subjectivation, and Testimony in Remnants of Auschwitz by Catherine Mills
  • Supposing the Impossibility of Silence and of Sound, of Voice: Bataille, Agamben, and the Holocaust by Paul Hegarty
  • Law and Life by Rainer Maria Kiesow
  • The Exemplary Exception: Philosophical and Political Decisions in Giorgio Agamben's Homo Sacer by Andrew Norris
  • The State of Exception by Giorgio Agamben
  • Contributors
  • Index