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3 - Agamben and the Rise of ‘Bare Life’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2013

John Lechte
Affiliation:
Macquarie University
Saul Newman
Affiliation:
Goldsmiths, University of London
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Summary

In the era of biopolitics, there is no transcendence: substance (life in general) is not independent of the different modes (forms of life), but the unlimited – or ‘anarchical’ – totality of the modes themselves, different merely according to their degree of intensity and power. (Ojakangus 2005: 12 [emphasis in original])

As we proposed in the previous chapter, to exclude human beings from humanity does not erase their humanness and, indeed, may actually confirm it. In large part, this and the following chapter set out to verify this statement by pinning down the key elements in Agamben's approach to power and politics in contemporary Western societies. Once clarified, these points shall put us in a much better position to appreciate and evaluate the significance of the notion of the ‘camp’ as the key tendency, according to Agamben, in democratic politics today.

Of course, we now know that Agamben is indebted to Aristotle's distinction in defining life in terms of zoē (life as mired in necessity and the satisfaction of basic needs, but also life as natural life or as alive-ness) and bios (life as a form or way of life). Bios, as a political life, was a way of life; as such, it was the way of freedom. This freedom is possible to the extent that the exclusion of bare life founds the ‘city of men’ (= the polity). In our view, this is similar to Arendt's position in relation to ancient Greek society, where the exclusion of pure necessity founds the realm of action as freedom and creativity – the political realm proper.

Type
Chapter
Information
Agamben and the Politics of Human Rights
Statelessness, Images, Violence
, pp. 49 - 76
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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