4,070 research outputs found
Imperatives without imperator
Schmittâs theologisation of sovereignty has been subjected, 50 years later, to a âquarter turnâ by Foucaultâs move from issues of domination to issues of government. After a further 30 years, radicalising Foucault, Agambenâs archaeology of economy adds another âquarter turnâ: the structure that emerges once the old European conjugality of facticity and validity, of praxis and being, emptied of all bonds, links, and loops, gives way to the bare opposition âbipolarityâ. The new constellation provides the old legal-theoretical (kelsenian) problem of rules unsuspended from a ruler who would authorise them, with a new, unexpected, political content and with a change of epistemic paradigm. Abstract from publisher website at: http://www.springerlink.com/content/r875043667332q76/?p=20359db2f2504c2882f03f03e2c94902&pi=
The Profanation of Revelation: On Language and Immanence in the Work of Giorgio Agamben
This essay seeks to articulate the many implications which Giorgio Agambenâs work holds for theology. It aims therefore to examine his (re)conceptualizations of language, in light of particular historical glosses on the âname of Godâ and the nature of the âmysticalâ, as well as to highlight the political task of profanation, one of his most central concepts, in relation to the logos said to embody humanityâs âreligiousâ quest to find its Voice. As such, we see how he challenges those standard (ontotheological) notions of transcendence which have been consistently aligned with various historical forms of sovereignty. In addition, I intend to present his redefinition of revelation as solely the unveiling of the âname of Godâ as the fact of our linguistic being, a movement from the transcendent divine realm to the merely human world before us. By proceeding in this manner, this essay tries to close in on one of the largest theological implications contained within Agambenâs work: the establishment of an ontology that could only be described as a form of âabsoluteâ immanence, an espousal of some form of pantheism (or perhaps panentheism) yet to be more fully pronounced within his writings
Impossible protest: noborders in Calais
Since the closure of the Red Cross refugee reception centre in Sangatte, undocumented migrants in Calais hoping to cross the border to Britain have been forced to take refuge in a number of squatted migrant camps, locally known by all as âthe jungles.â Unauthorised shanty-like residences built by the migrants themselves, living conditions in the camps are very poor. In June 2009, European ânoborderâ activists set up a week-long protest camp in the area with the intention of confronting the authorities over their treatment of undocumented migrants. In this article, we analyse the June 2009 noborder camp as an instance of âimmigrant protest.â Drawing on ethnographic materials and Jacques Rancière's work on politics and aesthetics, we construct a typology of forms of border control through which to analyse the different ways in which the politics of the noborder camp were staged, performed and policed. Developing a critique of policing practices which threatened to make immigrant protest âimpossibleâ, we highlight moments of protest which, through the affirmation of an âaxiomaticâ equality, disrupted and disarticulated the borders between citizens and non-citizens, the political and non-political
Tabula Rasa and Human Nature
It is widely believed that the philosophical concept of 'tabula rasa' originates with Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding and refers to a state in which a child is as formless as a blank slate. Given that both these beliefs are entirely false, this article will examine why they have endured from the eighteenth century to the present. Attending to the history of philosophy, psychology, psychiatry and feminist scholarship it will be shown how the image of the tabula rasa has been used to signify an originary state of formlessness, against which discourses on the true nature of the human being can differentiate their position. The tabula rasa has operated less as a substantive position than as a whipping post. However, it will be noted that innovations in psychological theory over the past decade have begun to undermine such narratives by rendering unintelligible the idea of an 'originary' state of human nature
Reading Immanence
The following text opened the conference, âThe Concept of Immanence in Philosophy and the Artsâ, held in Vienna in May 2016. It is a reader consisting of key passages on immanence by Gilles Deleuze, Baruch de Spinoza, Giorgio Agamben, Henri Bergson, François Laruelle, Antonin Artaud and Friedrich Nietzsche. The reader was put together by Arno BĂśhler and Elisabeth Schäfer, and a collage of its content arranged by Susanne Valerie Granzer, who read out these text fragments at the start of the conference. Her reading was sporadically interrupted by Alice Lagaay, whose comments served to draw lines of connection between the dense theoretical texts and the performative immanent context in which they were being read and digestedâthe context of the conference. We present here the readings and their lightheartedâand at times deadly seriousâcommentary as performed. Readers are invited to imagine and re-enact the live-ness of this event, letting their own comments, questions and musings interrupt the proposed interruptions of reading
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