Date: Mon, 12 Feb 2007 16:54:57 +0000 To: deleuze-guattari-AT-lists.driftline.org Subject: [D-G] new book The biopolitics of the war on terror Life struggles, liberal modernity and the defence of logistical societies Julian Reid Manchester University Press, Reappraising the Political Series (Jon Simons and Simon Tormey eds.) December 2006 The War on Terror is widely represented as a conflict between regimes tasked with achieving security for human life against an enemy dedicated to the destruction of the social and political conditions necessary for the flourishing of human life. Not simply an enemy that is motivated against the interests of common humanity, but an enemy which in being so driven, is ready to resort to subhuman tactics, and which therefore requires, paradoxically, a less than human response in defence of the integrity of human life. Hence the declaration by liberal regimes and the mobilisation of their societies for a war of fundamentally illiberal proportions and dimensions. A war deemed to require the permanent mobilisation of entire societies against an enemy said to threaten their security from within. A war against an enemy which like a parasite living off its human host, breeds in the most vulnerable areas of liberal societies, waiting for the moment to release a pathological violence upon its otherwise oblivious prey. A war which requires the development of new and evermore intensive techniques with which to monitor the movements and dispositions of the life of liberal societies themselves because it is there that the enemy festers and will emerge to such devastating effect. In a challenge to such broadly disseminated understandings this book offers a biopolitical analysis of the War on Terror. Examining this war biopolitically means attempting to think more rigorously about the actuality of relations between the problems of life and politics which are constitutive of it. In developing this analysis the book critiques the claim firstly that liberal regimes do indeed exist for the security and promotion of human life, and secondly that the terrorists now targeting liberal societies are themselves devoid of human causes and aspirations. It demonstrates why this is not a war in defence of the integrity of human life against an enemy defined simply by a contradictory will for the destruction of human life, but is a war over the political constitution of life in which the limitations of liberal accounts of humanity are being put to the test, if not rejected outright. It is certainly true that the future of humanity is at stake in this conflict, but only in the sense that any resolution of it will depend on our abilities to move beyond the limits of existing understandings of what constitutes human life and its political potentialities. Building on the works of Foucault, Deleuze, Baudrillard, Virilio, and Negri, this book examines the possibilities for such a movement. What forms does life take, it asks, when liberal understandings of humanity are no longer understood as horizons to strive for, but impositions against which life must struggle in order to restore its integrity? What forms does life assume when war against liberal regimes becomes the determinate condition of its possibility? Answers to such questions are pressing, this book argues, if we earnestly desire an escape from the current impasses of a war on terror. Contents Preface 1 War and liberal modernity: a biopolitical critique 2 Logistical life: war, discipline, and the martial origins of liberal societies 3 Nomadic life: war, sovereignty, and resistance to the biopolitical imperium 4 Defiant life: the seductions of Terror amid the tyranny of the human 5 Circulatory life: 9/11 as architectural catastrophe and the hypermodernity of Terror 6 Biopolitical life: the 'war against war' of the multitude Epilogue 0-7190-7405-3 The biopolitics of the war on terror Julian Reid is Lecturer in International Relations at King's College London 234x156mm 192pp http://www.amazon.co.uk/o/ASIN/0719074053/ref=s9_asin_image_2/202-0831944-1599805 http://www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/information_areas/subjects/politics/ReappraisingthePolitical.htm -- Dr Julian Reid Lecturer in International Relations Director of Undergraduate Studies Department of War Studies King's College London Strand London United Kingdom WC2R 2LS www.kcl.ac.uk/schools/sspp/ws/staff/jr.html Email: julian.reid-AT-kcl.ac.uk Telephone: 0044 (0)20 7848 1249 _______________________________________________ List address: deleuze-guattari-AT-driftline.org Info: http://lists.driftline.org/listinfo.cgi/deleuze-guattari-driftline.org Archives: www.driftline.org
Display software: ArchTracker © Malgosia Askanas, 2000-2005