Under the auspices of neo-liberalism, technical
systems of compliance and efficiency have come to
underwrite the relationship of the state, the economy,
and a biopolitics of war, terror, and surveillance. In
Beyond Biopolitics, prominent theorists seek to account
for and critically engage the multiple tendencies that
have informed neoliberal governance in the past and are
expressed in its reformulation today. As studies of
military occupation, the policing of migration, blood
trades, financial markets, the war on terror, media
ecologies, and consumer branding, the essays explore the
governance of life and death in a near-future, a present
emptied of future potentialities. Contributors delve
into political and theoretical matters central to
projects of neoliberal governance, including states of
exception that are not exceptional but foundational;
risk analysis applied to the adjudication of "ethical"
forms of war, terror, and occupation; racism and the
management of the life capacities of populations; the
production and circulation of death as political and
economic currency; and the potential for critical and
aesthetic response. Taken together, the essays offer
ways to conceptualize biopolitics as the ground for
today's reformulation of governance. Contributors: Ann
Anagnost, Una Chung, Patricia Ticineto Clough, Steve
Goodman, Sora Y. Han, Stefano Harney, May Joseph, Randy
Martin, Brian Massumi, Luciana Parisi, Jasbir Puar, Amit
S. Rai, Eugene Thacker, & Catay Topal, Craig
Willse
|
|