ABSTRACT

Political resistance is flourishing. In this context, there is a growing interest to reread Michel Foucault’s work, especially from the late period, from the perspective of resistance, social movements and affirmative biopolitics. Yet what has been missing so far is a book-length, comprehensive study focusing on this topic. This volume undertakes this task, providing an original typology of the resources of resistance discovered in Foucault’s late thinking:

  • resistance as discursive protection of autonomy
  • bodily and affective resistance
  • the strategies, arts and practices of affirmative biopolitics or ‘politics of life’

The book shows how these different types of tools, arts and practices can be used in resistant politics, in struggles against various regimes and institutions of power and government, so that they mutually supplement and reinforce one another. The author embarks on advancing Foucault’s insights on resistance from where he stopped. Furthermore, the volume proposes a novel assessment of the Foucauldian political toolkit in the 21st century context, addressing its pertinence for struggles against neoliberalism and post-Fordist capitalism.

Foucault, Biopolitics and Resistance will be an important resource for students and scholars interested in Foucault, resistance and 21st century politics within many fields, including political science, international relations, contemporary and continental philosophy as well as sociology. The work elaborates fresh methodological insights, fruitful for further empirical research on social and political movements.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part I|2 pages

Resistance and The Politics Of Autonomy: Foucault’s Unyielding Discourses

part II|2 pages

Resistant Bodies and Affects

part III|2 pages

Affirmative Biopolitics and Resistance

chapter 3.1|23 pages

From Cynicism to Ars Erotica

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion