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The Government of Things

Foucault and the New Materialisms

Thomas Lemke

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NYU Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Philosophie

Beschreibung

Examines the theoretical achievements and the political impact of the new materialisms

Materialism, a rich philosophical tradition that goes back to antiquity, is currently undergoing a renaissance. In The Government of Things, Thomas Lemke provides a comprehensive overview and critical assessment of this “new materialism”. In analyzing the work of Graham Harman, Jane Bennett, and Karen Barad, Lemke articulates what, exactly, new materialism is and how it has evolved. These insights open up new spaces for critical thought and political experimentation, overcoming the limits of anthropocentrism.

Drawing on Michel Foucault’s concept of a “government of things”, the book also goes beyond new materialist scholarship which tends to displace political questions by ethical and aesthetic concerns. It puts forward a relational and performative account of materialities that more closely attends to the interplay of epistemological, ontological, and political issues.

Lemke provides definitive and much-needed clarity about the fascinating potential—and limitations—of new materialism as a whole. The Government of Things revisits Foucault’s more-than-human understanding of government to capture a new constellation of power: “environmentality”. As the book demonstrates, contemporary modes of government seek to control the social, ecological, and technological conditions of life rather than directly targeting individuals and populations. The book offers an essential and much needed tool to critically examine this political shift.

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Schlagwörter

Liberalism, Posthumanism, Apparatus, Social and Political Theory, Dispositive, Security, Assemblage, Diffraction, Science and Technology Studies, Objects, Anthropocentrism, Agential realism, Materialisms, Quantum Physics, Object-oriented ontology, Panarchy, Thing-Power, Life, Resilience, Vital Systems Security, Nonhuman Agency, Technology, Circulation, Pastoral Power, Materialization, Harman, Relationality, Materialities, Materializations, Biopolitics, Environmentality, Matter, Politics, Experimentation, Cybernetics, Milieu, Positivism, Self-Regulation, New Materialisms, Ethics, Vitalism, Speculative Realism, Agency, Vital Materialism