ABSTRACT

This book collects new contributions from an international group of leading scholars – including many who have worked closely with Agamben – to consider the impact of Agamben’s thought on research in the humanities and social sciences. Giorgio Agamben: Legal, Political and Philosophical Perspectives addresses the potential of Agamben’s thought by re-focusing attention away from his critiques of Western politics and towards his scheme for a political future. Part I of the book draws upon a wide range of issues such as legal oaths, legal reasoning and Christian conceptions of love in order to examine the potential for Agamben’s work to impact upon future legal scholarship. Part II focuses on political perspectives that include references to Marx, Rousseau and Agamben’s conception of the ‘messianic’. Theology, biology, and the thought of Gilles Deleuze, Walter Benjamin and Antonin Artaud are all drawn upon in Part III to explore philosophical perspectives in Agamben’s thought.

This book demonstrates the importance and originality of Giorgio Agamben, who has articulated a vision of politics that must be recognised as an influential contribution to modern philosophical and political thinking. It is a book that will be of considerable interest to many working across the humanities and social sciences.

chapter |9 pages

The limit of thought

part |61 pages

Before the law

chapter |18 pages

The curse of the law and the coming politics

On Agamben, Paul and the Jewish alternative

chapter |23 pages

‘A particular fetishism'

Love, law and the image in Agamben

part |100 pages

Politics

chapter |22 pages

The necessary critique of divine violence

Notes on Agamben, Benjamin and Sorel

chapter |22 pages

The purgatory of the camp

Political emancipation and the emancipation of the political

chapter |24 pages

Exemplary subjects

Camps and the politics of representation *

chapter |19 pages

‘The king reigns but he doesn't govern'

Thinking sovereignty and government with Agamben, Foucault and Rousseau

part |50 pages

Philosophy or, on the world-to-come

chapter |14 pages

Agamben's Artaud

chapter |18 pages

The many tasks still to come

Walter Benjamin and Giorgio Agamben on the future of philosophy and theology