• Title of article

    Agambenʹs geographies of modernity

  • Author/Authors

    Claudio Minca، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    20
  • From page
    78
  • To page
    97
  • Abstract
    This paper examines the geographical underpinnings of Giorgio Agambenʹs theory of sovereign power. Reflecting on Agambenʹs attempt in developing a unified theory of power, I highlight the eminently spatial nature of two of the key concepts that mark his argument: the structure of the ban and the camp as a paradigm of modern politics. In particular, I analyse how the spatialisation of biopolitics finds in the camp the ideal site for the definition of endless caesurae in the body of the nation, and for the definition of population as a merely spatial concept. I claim, therefore, that the biopolitical state machine activated by the recent war on terror is not only an autopoietic machine, but that it is also at the origin of new geographies of exception that are imposing a new nomos on global politics: a nomos within which decision is produced by a permanent state of exception, and where law exists only through its endless strategic (dis)application.
  • Keywords
    CAMP , Ban , Sovereign power , Agamben , History of geography , Space of exception
  • Journal title
    Political Geography
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Political Geography
  • Record number

    1292271