In this paper we want to open up for discussion what counts as `biopolitics'öa term frequently used by critics and devotees alike to describe the organization of political power and authority in a world after Bretton Woods, the Cold War, and 9/11. We do so on two fronts. On the one hand, we contrast Foucault on war and the normalizing society, Agamben on thanatopolitics, and Hardt and Negri on biopotenza. Our goal here is to draw attention to multiple competing definitions of biopolitics, and in so doing problematize the term as a catchall category to describe either the `nonsovereign' or the `postsovereign' operation of power. On the other hand, while refusing some baseline definition of what counts as biopolitics, we develop our own spec...