ABSTRACT

Several of the key concepts of biopolitics have come under scrutiny since the outbreak of Covid-19 pandemic. This volume brings into discussion how biopolitics can be conceptualized critically within a milieu of mass healing, such as in India. Contributors to this volume discuss crucial themes like geropolitics and pandemic reflections on the question of old age, borders and logistics in a world emerging from the pandemic, immunization of humans and humanization of immunity, thus defining the Indian contexts of the biopolitical problematic. Extending its analysis into a retrospective vision of thought traditions and socio-political underpinnings that shaped modernity and post-coloniality in India, it also explores the medico-therapeutical discourse embedded in philosophy of medicine and philosophical modernity tracing its interstitial positioning as therapeutic-assemblages in a milieu of mass healing.


This book will be useful for scholars and researchers of biopolitics, philosophy, political philosophy, sociology, science and technology studies, medical sociology, health and well-being, and cultural studies.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|14 pages

Geropolitics

Pandemic and the Figure of the Elderly in the United States and India

chapter 3|12 pages

Covidian Dilemma

To Perpetuate or Not to Perpetuate the Distress of the Poor

chapter 4|16 pages

Humanisation of Immunity and the Immunisation of Humans

State of the Problem

chapter 5|23 pages

‘Psychagogy’ or Pedagogy?

Techniques and Ethos of Philosophical Therapeutics

chapter 6|17 pages

Body or/and Life?

Assemblages in the Age of Mass Healing