Agamben‘s political philosophy of state power as founded on the expulsion of outcasts, who are embraced as key components of the system precisely by virtue of their potential exclusion, strangely omits such cardinal and long-familiar figures of sociopolitical inequality as the slave and the barbarian. These are neglected despite how they, together, stare us in the face from the very same pages in Aristotle from which Agamben derives his theory of bare life, and despite their key historical role in imperial state ideology and in the formation of empires. Agamben instead resurrects the obscure figure of homo sacer, an ancient Roman form of outlaw interpreted as bare life, mainly for the purpose of rethinking and debating citizenship, exclusio...
Outlaws have been formidable local authorities throughout history and some of their stories survived...
In her book “Arbitrary Rule. Slavery, Tyranny, and the Power of Life and Death”, the author Mary Nyq...
The purpose of this article is to examine Salvian of Marseilles’ (ca. 400–490 CE) invective in De gu...
Agamben’s political philosophy of state power as founded on the expulsion of outcasts, who are embra...
This paper is a proposition of a new intepretation of Sophokles’ ‘Antigone’. Author uses a specific ...
Giorgio Agamben defines the sacred man or Homo Sacer as one who is not worthy of sacrifice. Having l...
Antigone as homo sacer. Pre-political violence in the world without praxis This paper is a proposit...
Among the most controversial aspects of Aristotle’s philosophy is his endorsement of slavery. Natura...
"Agamben and Colonialism" collects papers that consider and reinterpret Giorgio Agamben’s theoretica...
In the English speaking world Marxist analysis of Roman law has long been scarce. This is even so i...
This thesis presents a philosophical and genealogical account of the ways in which the nation-state ...
The beginning of the Roman empire saw its citizens ’ identities shaken and reformed. Under Augustus,...
In this way, the fourth-century philosopher Bishop Synesius of Cyrene argued that every Roman househ...
This thesis aims to analyze the Temporary Protection Regulation’s legal and practical implications i...
During the early empire (27 BCE- 200 CE) elite Romans suppressed the legal rights of infames due to ...
Outlaws have been formidable local authorities throughout history and some of their stories survived...
In her book “Arbitrary Rule. Slavery, Tyranny, and the Power of Life and Death”, the author Mary Nyq...
The purpose of this article is to examine Salvian of Marseilles’ (ca. 400–490 CE) invective in De gu...
Agamben’s political philosophy of state power as founded on the expulsion of outcasts, who are embra...
This paper is a proposition of a new intepretation of Sophokles’ ‘Antigone’. Author uses a specific ...
Giorgio Agamben defines the sacred man or Homo Sacer as one who is not worthy of sacrifice. Having l...
Antigone as homo sacer. Pre-political violence in the world without praxis This paper is a proposit...
Among the most controversial aspects of Aristotle’s philosophy is his endorsement of slavery. Natura...
"Agamben and Colonialism" collects papers that consider and reinterpret Giorgio Agamben’s theoretica...
In the English speaking world Marxist analysis of Roman law has long been scarce. This is even so i...
This thesis presents a philosophical and genealogical account of the ways in which the nation-state ...
The beginning of the Roman empire saw its citizens ’ identities shaken and reformed. Under Augustus,...
In this way, the fourth-century philosopher Bishop Synesius of Cyrene argued that every Roman househ...
This thesis aims to analyze the Temporary Protection Regulation’s legal and practical implications i...
During the early empire (27 BCE- 200 CE) elite Romans suppressed the legal rights of infames due to ...
Outlaws have been formidable local authorities throughout history and some of their stories survived...
In her book “Arbitrary Rule. Slavery, Tyranny, and the Power of Life and Death”, the author Mary Nyq...
The purpose of this article is to examine Salvian of Marseilles’ (ca. 400–490 CE) invective in De gu...