Biopolitics as a System of Thought

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A01=Serene Richards
Author_Serene Richards
Biopolitics
Category=QD
Category=QDHR
Category=QDTK
Category=QDTS
Collective intellect
Continental Philosophy
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
Foucault
Knowledge
Modern Philosophy
Political Philosophy
Social Philosophy
Technocapital

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350412125
  • Weight: 260g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 214mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Dec 2025
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Our contemporary mode of life is characterised by what Serene Richards in Biopolitics as a System of Thought calls: Smart Being. Smart Being believes in the solutions of techno-capital where living is always at stake and directed to survival. Armed with this concept, this book examines how we arrived at this mode of being and asks how it could be that, while the material conditions of our lives have increasingly worsened, our capacities for effective political action, understood as the capacity for transforming our existing social relations, appear to be diminishing.

Drawing from jurists and philosophers such as Pierre Legendre, Yan Thomas, Giorgio Agamben, Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze, Richards argues that biopolitics intervenes at the most minute level of our everyday lives. She argues that there are conceptual truths presupposed in the mode of biopolitics’ functioning, for instance that life can be assigned a value for the purpose of intervention, abandonment, or death, which have implications for our politics. In exciting engagements with political movements such as the post-May 1968 Mouvement des travailleurs Arabes (MTA), Richards shows how demands to transform our system of social relations are undermined by institutional models that proffer to offer rights protection while simultaneously annihilating the living altogether. Through a reappraisal of law, governance and capital, Richards seeks to reconceptualise our collectivity of thought, arguing for a politics of destitution that could form the basis of a communism to come.

Serene Richards is Lecturer in Law at NYU London, UK and Affiliated Researcher at École Pratique des Hautes Étude, France.

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