As innovations in military technologies race toward ever-greater
levels of automation and autonomy, debates over the ethics of
violent technologies tread water. Death Machines reframes these
debates, arguing that the way we conceive of the ethics of
contemporary warfare is itself imbued with a set of
bio-technological rationalities that work as limits. The task for
critical thought must therefore be to unpack, engage, and challenge
these limits. Drawing on the work of Hannah Arendt, the book offers
a close reading of the technology-biopolitics-complex that informs
and produces contemporary subjectivities, highlighting the perilous
implications this has for how we think about the ethics of
political violence, both now and in the future. -- .
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