Reader

Add friend
Sign in to Goodreads to learn more about Reader.


Loading...
“in “biocapitalism” the improvement or prolongation of one person’s life is often linked to the deterioration of the health and the systematic corporeal exploitation of someone else’s”
Thomas Lemke, Biopolitics: An Advanced Introduction

Donna J. Haraway
“I am making an argument for the cyborg as a fiction mapping our social and bodily reality and as an imaginative resource suggesting some very fruitful couplings. Michael Foucault's biopolitics is a flaccid premonition of cyborg politics, a very open field.”
Donna Haraway

“What civilization has done to women’s bodies is no different than what it’s done to the earth, to children, to the sick, to the proletariat; in short, to everything that isn’t supposed to “talk,” and in general to whatever the knowledge-powers of government and management don’t want to hear, which is thus relegated to exclusion from all recognized activity, relegated to the role of a witness.”
Tiqqun

Giorgio Agamben
“If it is the sovereign who, insofar as he decides on the state of exception, has the power to decide which life may be killed without commission of homicide, in the age of bio-politics this power becomes emancipated from the state of exception and transformed into the power to decide the point at which life ceases to be politically relevant. When life becomes the supreme political value, not only is the problem of life's non-value thereby posed, it is as if the ultimate ground of sovereign power were at stake in this decision. In modern bio-politics, sovereign is he who decides on the value or non-value of life as-such.”
Giorgio Agamben, Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life

year in books

Reader hasn't connected with their friends on Goodreads, yet.





Polls voted on by Reader

Lists liked by Reader