Under the auspices of neoliberalism, technical systems of compliance and efficiency have come to underwrite the relations among the state, the economy, and a biopolitics of war, terror, and surveillance. In Beyond Biopolitics, prominent theorists seek to account for and critically engage the tendencies that have informed neoliberal governance in the past and are expressed in its reformulation today. As studies of military occupation, the policing of migration, blood trades, financial markets, the war on terror, media ecologies, and consumer branding, the essays explore the governance of life and death in a near-future, a present emptied of future potentialities. The contributors delve into political and theoretical matters central to projects of neoliberal governance, including states of exception that are not exceptional but foundational; risk analysis applied to the adjudication of "ethical" forms of war, terror, and occupation; racism and the management of the life capacities of populations; the production and circulation of death as political and economic currency; and the potential for critical and aesthetic response. Together, the essays offer ways to conceptualize biopolitics as the ground for today's reformulation of governance.
Contributors. Ann Anagnost, Una Chung, Patricia Ticineto Clough, Steve Goodman, Sora Y. Han, Stefano Harney, May Joseph, Randy Martin, Brian Massumi, Luciana Parisi, Jasbir Puar, Amit S. Rai, Eugene Thacker, Cagatay Topal, Craig Willse
Industry Reviews
"Beyond Biopolitics explores new forms of life itself, as the modern strategies for the governance of populations mutate and metastasise into strange new configurations--biosecurity, biocapital, thanato-politics, speculation, risk and violence. The scholars in this collection document the myriad ways that the old racisms and colonial power relations are re-energised by state and market tactics to govern terrorism, environmental catastrophe, and the global flows of information, people, genes and viruses. In its prescient identification of these dynamics, Beyond Biopolitics gives us a map of life's near-future." Catherine Waldby, author of Tissue Economies: Blood, Organs and Cell Lines in Late Capitalism "These essays by some of today's most exciting and innovative theorists interrogate the connection between biopower and governance from an extraordinarily wide range of perspectives. Together they give us a complex and multifaceted view on the contemporary nature and functioning of power." Michael Hardt, co-author of Commonwealth