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State, Security, and Subject Formation

edited by Anna Yeatman
edited by Magdalena Zolkos

Book title

State, Security, and Subject Formation brings together leading scholars to examine the question of how to secure the conditions for a civil and peaceful life together.

  • Imprint: Continuum
  • Pub. date: 01 Jan 2010
  • ISBN: 9780826442840
216 Pages, paperback World rights £19.99 Add to my Catalogue Add to my basket

Description

State, Security, and Subject Formation addresses the question of how to secure the conditions for a civil and peaceful life together. It brings together leading scholars to examine democracy from two approaches: peaceful coexistence and the secular state as public authority and the necessity of division between communities of faith that allows for a state that defends the values of the community. This book aims to understand the rationality that informs both approaches, interpreting the subjectivities within each.
To do so, the interdisciplinary, scholarly essays examine 17th century political thought and how it is caught up in debate about the relationship between faith and the state at a time when religious wars are endemic and profoundly destructive. They also provide an in-depth discussion of contemporary 21st and 20th century approaches to the question of security and the issue of subjective capacity for peaceful co-existence.
Civil Order and Politics is the outcome of an intensive cross-disciplinary cooperation and, as such, not only demonstrates the richness of relevant themes and issues, but also brings to the fore challenges and problems associated with civil practice and theorizing of politics. Through its thematic juxtaposition of state, security, and subjectivity within the framework of civil order and politics, the book fills a gap in the contemporary political literature that will be of interest to anyone studying and researching these issues.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1    State, Security and Subject Formation—an Introduction  by Anna Yeatman  
                        
Chapter 2    The Man and the Citizen: the Pluralization of Civil Personae in Early Modern German Natural Law by Ian Hunter   

Chapter 3     Reassembling Civilization: State-formation, Subjectivity, Security, Power by Robert van Krieken                   
Chapter 4     Without Exception: Democracy and Sovereignty After Carl Schmitt by Charles Barbour    
               
Chapter 5     Anti-security Personae: from David Dyzenhaus’s Human Rights Lawyer to Giorgio Agamben’s illuminato by   David Saunders
               

Chapter 6     Doubt, Ambiguity and Subject Formation by      Paul Hoggett and Nigel Williams               
 
Chapter 7     The Subject ‘At the Gates of the Polis’: Theorizing Transitional Civic Order from the Site of Trauma by Magdalena Zolkos         
             
Chapter 8     Self-preservation and the Idea of the State by Anna Yeatman           
               

Chapter 9     Society, State, Security, and Subject Formation: The Emergence of Modern Neutrality Society and the Formation of the Types of Subjects it Requires by Gary Wickham and Barbara Evers     
         

Chapter 10     Anti-colonial Nationalisms: the Case of India by Benjamin Zachariah        
              
Chapter 11     The Sense of Existing and its Political Implications (on François Flahault’s ‘General Anthropology’) by Jeffrey Minson            
              
Bibliography                                   

Author(s)

Anna Yeatman,

Anna Yeatman is professor and director of the Centre for Citizenship and Public Policy, University of Western Sydney.  She is a political and social theorist who has also practical experience in public policy. 

Magdalena Zolkos, Magdalena Zolkos is research fellow in political theory at the Center for Citizenship and Public Policy, University of Western Sydney. She has published on issues of reconciliation, collective trauma, community and testimony.

Reviews

"Security has in recent years been aligned with emergency, border defence, and bare life. Not in this volume, whose contributors turn to an unusual variety of thinkers (from Pufendorf to Nehru, Hobbes and Locke to Arendt and Flahault), and use diverse, multi-disciplinary resources (political theory, psychoanalysis, anthropology, contextual history and conceptual analysis) to take us beyond Schmitt and Agamben. Here, security names the conditions of a civic project of peace and reconciliation, and a citizenship of active enjoyment, both situated in the ample terrain between law and its suspension. The contributions are thoughtful and the collection as a whole pushes the political theory of security in new and welcome directions." -- Bonnie Honig, Sarah Rebecca Roland Professor, Political Science, Northwestern University and American Bar Foundation, author of Emergency Politics: Paradox, Law, Democracy (2009)

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‘One of the distinctive themes animating this  interdisciplinary collection of essays is that what the editors refer to as the  fragile character of the ‘civic project’ - the goal of creating a political order characterized by peaceful coexistence on equal terms for all participants. This theme is explored across a range of  historical periods and theoretical approaches, but is also aimed at shedding light on our current political situation. At a time when the idea of the secular state is once again a controversial category, this is a timely and thoughtful collection’.  --Duncan Ivison, University of Sydney 

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