ABSTRACT

This collection provides English readers with a critical update on current debates on biopolitics in and around Italian thought. More than a decade after the publication of seminal books such as Agamben’s Homo Sacer and Hardt and Negri’s Empire, the names of, among others, Roberto Esposito, Paolo Virno, Christian Marazzi, and Andrea Fumagalli have recently been brought to the attention of Anglophone scholars and political activists. Several authors have rightly emphasised the evanescent character of biopolitics, and the difficulty in providing a definition of it that could embrace all the conflicting theories of its most celebrated critics and supporters. The present collection is structured around the basic contention that bio-economy, human nature, and Christianity are the three visible contemporary manifestations of the theoretical object/problem of biopolitics in, respectively, Italian post-workerist economics, post-Marxist philosophical anthropology, and post-structuralist ontology.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Angelaki.

chapter 5|13 pages

The Word and the Flesh

Postworkerism and the biopolitics of language in paolo virno and christian marazzi

chapter 10|15 pages

The Bio-Theo-Politics of Birth

chapter 11|7 pages

Angels

chapter 12|12 pages

Divine Management

Critical remarks on giorgio agamben's the kingdom and the glory

chapter 13|11 pages

Giorgio Agamben's Godless Saints

Saving what was not

chapter 14|13 pages

Kafka's Land Surveyor K.

Agamben's anti-muselmann

chapter 15|18 pages

The Event of Language as Force of Life

Agamben's linguistic vitalism