ABSTRACT

Focusing on the moment when social unrest takes hold of a populace, Law and Disorder offers a new account of sovereignty with an affective theory of public order and protest.
 
In a state of unrest, the affective architecture of the sovereign order begins to crumble. The everyday peace and calm of public space is shattered as sovereign peace is challenged. In response, the state unleashes the full force of its exceptionality, and the violence of public order policing is deployed to restore the affects and atmospheres of habitual social relations. This book is a work of contemporary critical legal theory. It develops an affective theory of sovereign orders by focusing on the government of affective life and popular encounters with sovereignty. The chapters explore public order as a key articulation between sovereignty and government. In particular, policing of public order is exposed as a contemporary mode of exceptionality cast in the fires of colonial subjection. The state of unrest helps us see the ordinary affects of the sovereign order, but it also points to crowds as the essential component in the production of unrest. The atmospheres produced by crowds seep out from the squares and parks of occupation, settling on cities and states. In these new atmospheres, new possibilities of political and social organisation begin to appear. In short, crowds create the affective condition in which the settlement at the heart of the sovereign order can be revisited. This text thus develops a theory of sovereignty which places protest at its heart, and a theory of protest which starts from the affective valence of crowds.
 
This book’s examination of the relationship between sovereignty and protest is of considerable interest to readers in law, politics and cultural studies, as well as to more general readers interested in contemporary forms of political resistance.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

chapter |9 pages

Prologue

Sovereign aesthetics

part I|40 pages

Affective sovereignty

chapter 1|9 pages

Atmospheres of sovereignty

chapter 2|9 pages

Switching sovereign genres

chapter 3|6 pages

Playing for hearts and minds

chapter 4|8 pages

The government of temper

chapter 5|6 pages

Excursus 1

Affective life

part II|54 pages

The apparatus of public order

chapter 6|11 pages

The sovereign peace

chapter 7|8 pages

Signs taken for sovereignty

chapter 8|8 pages

The state of unrest

chapter 9|10 pages

Psycho-affective public order

chapter 10|10 pages

The coloniality that remains

chapter 11|3 pages

Excursus 2

An affective theory of public order

part III|38 pages

The crowd and the people

chapter 12|7 pages

Affective patterning

chapter 13|8 pages

A somnambulist or turbulent people

chapter 14|8 pages

The crowd as political technology

chapter 15|8 pages

Securing the people

chapter 16|3 pages

Excursus 3

Crowds and populace

part IV|40 pages

The enmity of unrest

chapter 17|7 pages

The surprise of unrest

chapter 18|12 pages

What violence might assemble

chapter 19|9 pages

Enmity and the atmosphere of violence

chapter 20|4 pages

Excursus 4

The state of unrest

chapter 21|4 pages

Conclusion

Notes from the tumult