Foucault, Freedom and SovereigntyRoutledge, 2016 M04 15 - 180 pages Against the prevailing interpretations which disqualify a Foucauldian approach from the discourse of freedom, this study offers a novel concept of political freedom and posits freedom as the primary axiological motif of Foucault's writing. Based on a new interpretation of the relation of Foucault's approach to the problematic of sovereignty, Sergei Prozorov both reconstructs ontology of freedom in Foucault's textual corpus and outlines the modalities of its practice in the contemporary terrain of global governance. The book critically engages with the acclaimed post-Foucauldian theories of Giorgio Agamben and Antonio Negri, thereby restoring the controversial notion of the sovereign subject to the critical discourse on global politics. As a study in political thought, this book will be suitable for students and scholars interested in the problematic of political freedom, philosophy and global governance. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 40
Page vii
... experience of postcommunism demonstrates most starkly the impossibility of securing or guaranteeing freedom by designing a perfect political order, in which everyone's desire for freedom would be satisfied. This impossibility makes our ...
... experience of postcommunism demonstrates most starkly the impossibility of securing or guaranteeing freedom by designing a perfect political order, in which everyone's desire for freedom would be satisfied. This impossibility makes our ...
Page 1
... experience. On the one hand, is there anything more self-evident and less contestable that the human desire for freedom? We may endlessly debate on the form of political order that best satisfies this desire, discuss the relative ...
... experience. On the one hand, is there anything more self-evident and less contestable that the human desire for freedom? We may endlessly debate on the form of political order that best satisfies this desire, discuss the relative ...
Page 3
... experience or a practice. This reduction effaces the possibility of problematising the very sense of 'unfreedom ... experiences of subjection and liberation and is rather inscribed in the structure of the political system and its ...
... experience or a practice. This reduction effaces the possibility of problematising the very sense of 'unfreedom ... experiences of subjection and liberation and is rather inscribed in the structure of the political system and its ...
Page 5
... experience of freedom and its replacement with an abstract principle of political order. It is the unease about the reduction of freedom to a political project undertaken in its name that motivates our engagement with the political ...
... experience of freedom and its replacement with an abstract principle of political order. It is the unease about the reduction of freedom to a political project undertaken in its name that motivates our engagement with the political ...
Page 6
... experience of freedom, which can never be subsumed under any set of normative criteria. The reason for abandoning the problematic of perfect order is that this very mode of discourse invariably sacrifices the concrete experience of ...
... experience of freedom, which can never be subsumed under any set of normative criteria. The reason for abandoning the problematic of perfect order is that this very mode of discourse invariably sacrifices the concrete experience of ...
Contents
1 | |
AN AUSTERE ONTOLOGY OF FREEDOM | 23 |
THE RETURN OF THE SOVEREIGN SUBJECT | 79 |
Why Want Freedom? | 147 |
Bibliography | 153 |
Index | 167 |
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Common terms and phrases
abandonment accordance actual affirmation Agamben already appears argue argument attempt authors becomes biopolitical biopower camps chapter concept concrete freedom condition consists constitutive contemporary contingent contrast critical critique decision Derrida desire diagram diagrammatic discourse discussion distinction effect Empire entirely established ethics exception excess existence experience figure finally force Foucauldian Foucault’s foundation functions global governmental Hardt and Negri historical human human existence identity immanent impossible individual insofar liberal liberty limit living logically longer means merely Michael multitude nature necessarily negative never nonetheless normative notion object one’s ontological opposite particular perfect philosophy political positive possibility potentiality power relations practices practices of freedom precisely present presupposes principle production pure question radical rationalities reading reduction refusal relation remains resistance Schmitt sense simply simultaneously singular social society sovereign sovereign power sovereignty space structure studies thought transcendence transgression understanding