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Form of Life: Agamben and the Destitution of Rules - (Encounters in Law & Philosophy) by Gian Giacomo Fusco (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- The notion of form-of-life refers to a living dimension that has overthrown the structures of power in which humans are supposedly destined to live, disclosing the possibility of a new understanding of political and legal life.
- Author(s): Gian Giacomo Fusco
- 232 Pages
- Freedom + Security / Law Enforcement, Jurisprudence
- Series Name: Encounters in Law & Philosophy
Description
About the Book
Giorgio Agamben's form-of-life discloses the possibility of a new understanding of political and legal life. This book places 'form-of-life' in the context of contemporary philosophy, re-imagining some of the basic categories of human socialities- such as work, rights, obligation, property and use.
Book Synopsis
The notion of form-of-life refers to a living dimension that has overthrown the structures of power in which humans are supposedly destined to live, disclosing the possibility of a new understanding of political and legal life. By placing the 'form-of-life' in the context of contemporary philosophy, this book re-imagines anew some of the basic categories of human socialities - such as work, rights, obligation, property, and use. It explores the ways in which Agamben's philosophy might be helpful in developing political and legal strategies that leave behind a situation dominated by pervasive sovereign violence.
At a moment of history in which the fundamental promises of Western modernity are undergoing a decisive crisis, to look beyond the basic categories of human social institutions becomes an urgency. Through a close engagement with Agamben's concept of form-of-life, this book seeks to challenge the current crisis of juridical, political and economic reality.
Review Quotes
This book is like a mirror in which dispersed pieces of Agamben's thinking are brilliantly reconstituted into a new constellation. Being a great thinker of anarchy, Fusco portrays Agamben as a theoretician of life emancipated from the curse of power. A redemption act to Agamben, a must-read for Agamben scholars.
--Przemyslaw Tacik, Jagiellonian University, KrakówThis is one of the best books on Agamben in recent years and essential reading for any Agamben scholar. More than it is an original and wide-raging book that is immensely useful in its consideration of our understanding of sovereignty and form of life in critical jurisprudence. It is fascinating reading for anyone interested in Agamben's biopolitics in the context of Schmitt's decisionism, Wittgenstein's form of life, law and, crucially, the essential recent body work of Agamben published in the last two decades. This will be a book we return to again and again in the years to come.
--William Watkin, Brunel University