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After two years of global pandemic, it is no surprise that
immunization is now at the center of our experience. From the
medicalization of politics to the disciplining of individuals, from
lockdowns to mass vaccination programs, contemporary societies seem
to be firmly embedded in a syndrome of immunity. To
understand the ambivalent effects of this development, it is
necessary to go back to its modern genesis, when the languages of
law, politics, and medicine began to merge into the biopolitical
regime we have been living under for some time. This regime places
a high priority on immunization and security: no security is more
important than health security. The Covid-19 pandemic has taken the
dynamic of immunization to a new level: for the first time in
history, we see societies seeking to achieve generalized immunity
in their entire populations through vaccination. This allows us to
glimpse the possibility of a âcommon immunityâ that strengthens
the relation between community and immunity. The dramatic tensions
we have experienced in recent years between security and freedom,
norm and exception, power and existence, all refer to the complex
relationship between community and immunity, the decisive features
of which are reconstructed in this book. Building on the
prescient argument originally developed two decades ago
in Immunitas, Roberto Esposito demonstrates in this new book
how the pandemic and our responses to it have brought into sharp
relief the fundamental biopolitical conditions of our contemporary
societies.
The notion of the "impolitical" developed in this volume draws its
meaning from the exhaustion of modernity's political categories,
which have become incapable of giving voice to any genuinely
radical perspective. The impolitical is not the opposite of the
political but rather its outer limit: the border from which we
might glimpse a trajectory away from all forms of political
theology and the depoliticizing tendencies of a completed
modernity. The book's reconstruction of the impolitical
lineage-which is anything but uniform-begins with the extreme
conclusions reached by Carl Schmitt and Romano Guardini in their
reflections on the political and then moves through a series of
encounters between several great twentieth-century texts: from
Hannah Arendt's On Revolution to Hermann Broch's The Death of
Virgil, to Elias Canetti's Crowds and Power; from Simone Weil's The
Need for Roots to Georges Bataille's Sovereignty to Ernst Junger's
An der Zeitmauer. The trail forged by this analysis offers a
defiant counterpoint to the modern political lexicon, but at the
same time a contribution to our understanding of its categories.
The debate on "political theology" that ran throughout the
twentieth century has reached its end, but the ultimate meaning of
the notion continues to evade us. Despite all the attempts to
resolve the issue, we still speak its language-we remain in its
horizon. The reason for this, says Roberto Esposito, lies in the
fact that political theology is neither a concept nor an event;
rather, it is the pivot around which the machine of Western
civilization has revolved for more than 2,000 years. At its heart
stands the juncture between universalism and exclusion, unity and
separation: the tendency of the Two to make itself into One by
subordinating one part to the domination of the other. All the
philosophical and political categories that we use, starting with
the Roman and Christian notion of "the person," continue to
reproduce this exclusionary dispositif. To take our departure from
political theology, then-the task of contemporary philosophy-we
must radically revise our conceptual lexicon. Only when thought has
been returned to its rightful "place"-connected to the human
species as a whole rather than to individuals-will we be able to
escape from the machine that has imprisoned our lives for far too
long.
The work of contemporary Italian thinkers, what Roberto Esposito
refers to as Italian Theory, is attracting increasing attention
around the world. This book explores the reasons for its growing
popularity, its distinguishing traits, and why people are turning
to these authors for answers to real-world issues and problems. The
approach he takes, in line with the keen historical consciousness
of Italian thinkers themselves, is a historical one. He offers
insights into the great unphilosophical philosophers of
lifeOCopoets, painters, politicians and revolutionaries,
film-makers and literary criticsOCowho have made Italian thought,
from its beginnings, an impure thought. People like Machiavelli,
Croce, Gentile, and Gramsci were all compelled to fulfill important
political roles in the societies of their times. No wonder they
felt that the abstract vocabulary and concepts of pure philosophy
were inadequate to express themselves. Similarly, artists such as
Dante, Leonardo Da Vinci, Leopardi, or Pasolini all had to turn to
other disciplines outside philosophy in order to discuss and
grapple with the messy, constantly changing realities of their
lives.
For this very reason, says Esposito, because Italian thinkers have
always been deeply engaged with the concrete reality of life
(rather than closed up in the introspective pursuits of traditional
continental philosophy) and because they have looked for the
answers of today in the origins of their own historical roots,
Italian theory is a living thought. Hence the relevance or
actuality that it holds for us today.
Continuing in this tradition, the work of Roberto Esposito is
distinguished by its interdisciplinary breadth. In this book, he
passes effortlessly from literary criticism to art history, through
political history and philosophy, in an expository style that
welcomes non-philosophers to engage in the most pressing problems
of our times. As in all his works, Esposito is inclusive rather
than exclusive; in being so, he celebrates the affirmative potency
of life.
Terms of the Political: Community, Immunity, Biopolitics presents a
decade of thought about the origins and possibilities of political
theory from one of contemporary Italy's most prolific and engaging
political theorists, Roberto Esposito. He has coined a number of
critical concepts in current debates about the past, present, and
future of biopolitics-from his work on the implications of the
etymological and philosophical kinship of community (communitas)
and immunity (immunitas) to his theorizations of the impolitical
and the impersonal. Taking on interlocutors from throughout the
Western philosophical tradition, from Aristotle and Augustine to
Weil, Arendt, Nancy, Foucault, and Agamben, Esposito announces the
eclipse of a modern political lexicon-"freedom," "democracy,"
"sovereignty," and "law"-that, in its attempt to protect human
life, has so often produced its opposite (violence, melancholy, and
death). Terms of the Political calls for the opening of political
thought toward a resignification of these and other operative
terms-such as "community," "immunity," "biopolitics," and "the
impersonal"-in ways that affirm rather than negate life. An
invaluable introduction to the breadth and rigor of Esposito's
thought, the book will also welcome readers already familiar with
Esposito's characteristic skill in overturning and breaking open
the language of politics.
We are living in an age of crisis-or an age in which everything is
labeled a crisis. Financial, debt, and refugee "crises" have
erupted. The word has also been applied to the Arab Spring and its
aftermath, Brexit, the 2016 U.S. election, and many other
international events. Yet the term has contradictory political and
strategic meanings for those challenging power structures and those
seeking to preserve them. For critics of the status quo, can the
rhetoric of crisis be used to foment urgency around issues like
climate change and financialization, or does framing a situation as
a "crisis" play into the hands of the existing political order,
which then seeks to tighten the leash by creating a state of
emergency? Critical Theory at a Crossroads presents conversations
with prominent theorists about the crises that have marked the past
years, the protest movements that have risen up in response, and
the use of the term in political discourse. Tariq Ali, Rosi
Braidotti, Wendy Brown, Maurizio Lazzarato, Angela McRobbie,
Jean-Luc Nancy, Antonio Negri, Jacques Ranciere, Saskia Sassen, and
Joseph Vogl offer their views on contemporary challenges and how we
might address them, candidly discussing the alternatives that new
social movements have offered, alongside an exchange between
Zygmunt Bauman and Roberto Esposito on theories of community.
Sparring over crucial developments in these past years of
catastrophe and the calamity of everyday life under capitalism,
they shed light on how crises and the discourse of crisis can both
obscure and reveal fundamental aspects of modern societies.
Terms of the Political: Community, Immunity, Biopolitics presents a
decade of thought about the origins and possibilities of political
theory from one of contemporary Italy's most prolific and engaging
political theorists, Roberto Esposito. He has coined a number of
critical concepts in current debates about the past, present, and
future of biopolitics-from his work on the implications of the
etymological and philosophical kinship of community (communitas)
and immunity (immunitas) to his theorizations of the impolitical
and the impersonal. Taking on interlocutors from throughout the
Western philosophical tradition, from Aristotle and Augustine to
Weil, Arendt, Nancy, Foucault, and Agamben, Esposito announces the
eclipse of a modern political lexicon-"freedom," "democracy,"
"sovereignty," and "law"-that, in its attempt to protect human
life, has so often produced its opposite (violence, melancholy, and
death). Terms of the Political calls for the opening of political
thought toward a resignification of these and other operative
terms-such as "community," "immunity," "biopolitics," and "the
impersonal"-in ways that affirm rather than negate life. An
invaluable introduction to the breadth and rigor of Esposito's
thought, the book will also welcome readers already familiar with
Esposito's characteristic skill in overturning and breaking open
the language of politics.
After two years of global pandemic, it is no surprise that
immunization is now at the center of our experience. From the
medicalization of politics to the disciplining of individuals, from
lockdowns to mass vaccination programs, contemporary societies seem
to be firmly embedded in a syndrome of immunity. To
understand the ambivalent effects of this development, it is
necessary to go back to its modern genesis, when the languages of
law, politics, and medicine began to merge into the biopolitical
regime we have been living under for some time. This regime places
a high priority on immunization and security: no security is more
important than health security. The Covid-19 pandemic has taken the
dynamic of immunization to a new level: for the first time in
history, we see societies seeking to achieve generalized immunity
in their entire populations through vaccination. This allows us to
glimpse the possibility of a âcommon immunityâ that strengthens
the relation between community and immunity. The dramatic tensions
we have experienced in recent years between security and freedom,
norm and exception, power and existence, all refer to the complex
relationship between community and immunity, the decisive features
of which are reconstructed in this book. Building on the
prescient argument originally developed two decades ago
in Immunitas, Roberto Esposito demonstrates in this new book
how the pandemic and our responses to it have brought into sharp
relief the fundamental biopolitical conditions of our contemporary
societies.
In this book Roberto Esposito explores the conceptual trajectories
of two of the twentieth century's most vital thinkers of the
political: Hannah Arendt and Simone Weil. Taking Homer's Iliad-that
"great prism through which every gesture has the possibility of
becoming public, precisely by being observed by others"- as the
common origin and point of departure for our understanding of
Western philosophical and political traditions, Esposito examines
the foundational relation between war and the political. Drawing
actively and extensively on Arendt's and Weil's voluminous
writings, but also sparring with thinkers from Marx to Heidegger,
The Origin of the Political traverses the relation between polemos
and polis, between Greece, Rome, God, force, technicity, evil, and
the extension of the Christian imperial tradition, while at the
same time delineating the conceptual and hermeneutic ground for the
development of Esposito's notion and practice of "the impolitical."
In Esposito's account Arendt and Weil emerge "in the inverse of the
other's thought, in the shadow of the other's light," to "think
what the thought of the other excludes not as something that is
foreign, but rather as something that appears unthinkable and, for
that very reason, remains to be thought." Moving slowly toward
their conceptualizations of love and heroism, Esposito unravels the
West's illusory metaphysical dream of peace, obliging us to
reevaluate ceaselessly what it means to be responsible in the wake
of past and contemporary forms of war.
What is the relationship between persons and things? And how does
the body transform this relationship? In this highly original new
book, Roberto Esposito - one of Italyâs leading political
philosophers - considers these questions and shows that starting
from the body, rather than from the thing or the person, can help
us to reconsider the status of both. Ever since its beginnings, our
civilization has been based on a strict, unequivocal distinction
between persons and things, founded on the instrumental domination
of persons over things. This opposition arose out of ancient Roman
law and persisted throughout modernity, to take its place in our
current global market, where it continues to generate growing
contradictions. Although the distinction seems to appear clear and
necessary to us, what we are continually witnessing in legal,
economic, and technological practice is a reversal of perspectives:
some categories of persons are becoming assimilated with things,
while some types of things are taking on a personal profile. With
his customary rigour, Roberto Esposito argues that there exists an
escape route out of this paradox, constituted by a new point of
view founded in the body. Neither a person nor a thing, the human
body becomes the decisive element in rethinking the concepts and
values that govern our philosophical, legal, and political
lexicons.
In this book Roberto Esposito explores the conceptual trajectories
of two of the twentieth centuryâs most vital thinkers of the
political: Hannah Arendt and Simone Weil. Taking Homerâs
Iliadâthat âgreat prism through which every gesture has the
possibility of becoming public, precisely by being observed by
othersââ as the common origin and point of departure for our
understanding of Western philosophical and political traditions,
Esposito examines the foundational relation between war and the
political. Drawing actively and extensively on Arendtâs and
Weilâs voluminous writings, but also sparring with thinkers from
Marx to Heidegger, The Origin of the Political traverses the
relation between polemos and polis, between Greece, Rome, God,
force, technicity, evil, and the extension of the Christian
imperial tradition, while at the same time delineating the
conceptual and hermeneutic ground for the development of
Espositoâs notion and practice of âthe impolitical.â In
Espositoâs account Arendt and Weil emerge âin the inverse of
the otherâs thought, in the shadow of the otherâs light,â to
âthink what the thought of the other excludes not as something
that is foreign, but rather as something that appears unthinkable
and, for that very reason, remains to be thought.â Moving slowly
toward their conceptualizations of love and heroism, Esposito
unravels the Westâs illusory metaphysical dream of peace,
obliging us to reevaluate ceaselessly what it means to be
responsible in the wake of past and contemporary forms of war.
The work of contemporary Italian thinkers, what Roberto Esposito
refers to as Italian Theory, is attracting increasing attention
around the world. This book explores the reasons for its growing
popularity, its distinguishing traits, and why people are turning
to these authors for answers to real-world issues and problems. The
approach he takes, in line with the keen historical consciousness
of Italian thinkers themselves, is a historical one. He offers
insights into the great "unphilosophical" philosophers of
life--poets, painters, politicians and revolutionaries, film-makers
and literary critics--who have made Italian thought, from its
beginnings, an "impure" thought. People like Machiavelli, Croce,
Gentile, and Gramsci were all compelled to fulfill important
political roles in the societies of their times. No wonder they
felt that the abstract vocabulary and concepts of pure philosophy
were inadequate to express themselves. Similarly, artists such as
Dante, Leonardo Da Vinci, Leopardi, or Pasolini all had to turn to
other disciplines outside philosophy in order to discuss and
grapple with the messy, constantly changing realities of their
lives.
For this very reason, says Esposito, because Italian thinkers have
always been deeply engaged with the concrete reality of life
(rather than closed up in the introspective pursuits of traditional
continental philosophy) and because they have looked for the
answers of today in the origins of their own historical roots,
Italian theory is a "living thought." Hence the relevance or
actuality that it holds for us today.
Continuing in this tradition, the work of Roberto Esposito is
distinguished by its interdisciplinary breadth. In this book, he
passes effortlessly from literary criticism to art history, through
political history and philosophy, in an expository style that
welcomes non-philosophers to engage in the most pressing problems
of our times. As in all his works, Esposito is inclusive rather
than exclusive; in being so, he celebrates the affirmative potency
of life.
No theme has been more central to international philosophical
debates than that of community: from American communitarianism to
Habermas's ethic of communication to the French deconstruction of
community in the work of Derrida and Nancy. Nevertheless, in none
of these cases has the concept been examined from the perspective
of community's original etymological meaning: "cum munus." In
"Communitas: The Origin and Destiny of Community," Roberto Esposito
does just that through an original counter-history of political
philosophy that takes up not only readings of community by Hobbes,
Rousseau, Kant, Heidegger and Bataille, but also by Holderlin,
Nietzsche, Canetti, Arendt, and Sartre. The result of his
extraordinary conceptual and lexical analysis is a radical
overturning of contemporary interpretations of community. Community
isn't a property, nor is it a territory to be separated and
defended against those who do not belong to it. Rather, it is a
void, a debt, a gift to the other that also reminds us of our
constitutive alterity with respect to ourselves.
The notion of the "impolitical" developed in this volume draws its
meaning from the exhaustion of modernity's political categories,
which have become incapable of giving voice to any genuinely
radical perspective. The impolitical is not the opposite of the
political but rather its outer limit: the border from which we
might glimpse a trajectory away from all forms of political
theology and the depoliticizing tendencies of a completed
modernity. The book's reconstruction of the impolitical
lineage-which is anything but uniform-begins with the extreme
conclusions reached by Carl Schmitt and Romano Guardini in their
reflections on the political and then moves through a series of
encounters between several great twentieth-century texts: from
Hannah Arendt's On Revolution to Hermann Broch's The Death of
Virgil, to Elias Canetti's Crowds and Power; from Simone Weil's The
Need for Roots to Georges Bataille's Sovereignty to Ernst Junger's
An der Zeitmauer. The trail forged by this analysis offers a
defiant counterpoint to the modern political lexicon, but at the
same time a contribution to our understanding of its categories.
The debate on "political theology" that ran throughout the
twentieth century has reached its end, but the ultimate meaning of
the notion continues to evade us. Despite all the attempts to
resolve the issue, we still speak its language-we remain in its
horizon. The reason for this, says Roberto Esposito, lies in the
fact that political theology is neither a concept nor an event;
rather, it is the pivot around which the machine of Western
civilization has revolved for more than 2,000 years. At its heart
stands the juncture between universalism and exclusion, unity and
separation: the tendency of the Two to make itself into One by
subordinating one part to the domination of the other. All the
philosophical and political categories that we use, starting with
the Roman and Christian notion of "the person," continue to
reproduce this exclusionary dispositif. To take our departure from
political theology, then-the task of contemporary philosophy-we
must radically revise our conceptual lexicon. Only when thought has
been returned to its rightful "place"-connected to the human
species as a whole rather than to individuals-will we be able to
escape from the machine that has imprisoned our lives for far too
long.
Roberto Esposito is one of the most prolific and important
exponents of contemporary Italian political theory. Bios"-his first
book to be translated into English-builds on two decades of highly
regarded thought, including his thesis that the modern
individual-with all of its civil and political rights as well as
its moral powers-is an attempt to attain immunity from the
contagion of the extraindividual, namely, the community. In Bios,
"Esposito applies such a paradigm of immunization to the analysis
of the radical transformation of the political into biopolitics.
Bios" discusses the origins and meanings of biopolitical discourse,
demonstrates why none of the categories of modern political thought
is useful for completely grasping the essence of biopolitics, and
reconstructs the negative biopolitical core of Nazism. Esposito
suggests that the best contemporary response to the current deadly
version of biopolitics is to understand what could make up the
elements of a positive biopolitics-a politics of life rather than a
politics of mastery and negation of life. In his introduction,
Timothy Campbell situates Esposito's arguments within American and
European thinking on biopolitics. A comprehensive, illuminating,
and highly original treatment of a critically important topic, Bios
"introduces an English-reading public to a philosophy that will
critically impact such wide-ranging current debates as stem cell
research, euthanasia, and the war on terrorism. Roberto Esposito
teaches contemporary philosophy at the Italian Institute for the
Human Sciences in Naples. His books include Categorie dell
impolitico, Nove pensieri sulla politica, Communitas: orgine e
destino della comunita," andImmunitas: protezione e negazione della
vita." Timothy Campbell is associate professor of Italian studies
in the Department of Romance Studies at Cornell University and the
author of Wireless Writing in the Age of Marconi" (Minnesota,
2006).
We are living in an age of crisis-or an age in which everything is
labeled a crisis. Financial, debt, and refugee "crises" have
erupted. The word has also been applied to the Arab Spring and its
aftermath, Brexit, the 2016 U.S. election, and many other
international events. Yet the term has contradictory political and
strategic meanings for those challenging power structures and those
seeking to preserve them. For critics of the status quo, can the
rhetoric of crisis be used to foment urgency around issues like
climate change and financialization, or does framing a situation as
a "crisis" play into the hands of the existing political order,
which then seeks to tighten the leash by creating a state of
emergency? Critical Theory at a Crossroads presents conversations
with prominent theorists about the crises that have marked the past
years, the protest movements that have risen up in response, and
the use of the term in political discourse. Tariq Ali, Rosi
Braidotti, Wendy Brown, Maurizio Lazzarato, Angela McRobbie,
Jean-Luc Nancy, Antonio Negri, Jacques Ranciere, Saskia Sassen, and
Joseph Vogl offer their views on contemporary challenges and how we
might address them, candidly discussing the alternatives that new
social movements have offered, alongside an exchange between
Zygmunt Bauman and Roberto Esposito on theories of community.
Sparring over crucial developments in these past years of
catastrophe and the calamity of everyday life under capitalism,
they shed light on how crises and the discourse of crisis can both
obscure and reveal fundamental aspects of modern societies.
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