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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Thomas LemkePublisher: New York University Press Imprint: New York University Press Weight: 0.463kg ISBN: 9781479829934ISBN 10: 1479829935 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 28 September 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsAt once an incisive critique of new materialisms and a timely extension of Michel Foucault's analytics of government, Thomas Lemke's The Government of Things is indispensable for anyone concerned with emerging forms of environmentality and the missing politics of the 'material turn.' By revisiting key terms in Foucault's later writings-dispositive, technology, milieu-and aligning an analytics of government with key insights from feminist and postcolonial science and technology studies, Lemke gives us powerful tools to analyze and historicize the dynamic socio-techno-ecological arrangements that differentially and unequally materialize human and nonhuman life and to imagine how they might be composed otherwise. -- Bruce Braun, co-editor of Political Matter: Technoscience, Democracy, and Public Life The Government of Things is an invaluable exploration and appraisal of new materialist approaches, advancing the argument that, while such approaches have much to offer, they also have distinctive weaknesses in handling questions of history and politics. Thomas Lemke proposes to remedy these shortcomings by drawing from Michel Foucault's 'tool-box,' thus situating the book's analysis at the vital intersection between science and technology studies and the study of governmental rationality. Particularly for those of us who share Lemke's ambivalence about new materialism, this book is an essential guide to the limits of this approach-and to avenues for productively combining it with other modes of inquiry. -- Stephen J. Collier, co-author of The Government of Emergency: Vital Systems, Expertise, and the Politics of Security """At once an incisive critique of new materialisms and a timely extension of Michel Foucault’s analytics of government, Thomas Lemke’s The Government of Things is indispensable for anyone concerned with emerging forms of environmentality and the missing politics of the 'material turn.' By revisiting key terms in Foucault's later writings—dispositive, technology, milieu—and aligning an analytics of government with key insights from feminist and postcolonial science and technology studies, Lemke gives us powerful tools to analyze and historicize the dynamic socio-techno-ecological arrangements that differentially and unequally materialize human and nonhuman life and to imagine how they might be composed otherwise."" -- Bruce Braun, co-editor of Political Matter: Technoscience, Democracy, and Public Life ""The Government of Things is an invaluable exploration and appraisal of new materialist approaches, advancing the argument that, while such approaches have much to offer, they also have distinctive weaknesses in handling questions of history and politics. Thomas Lemke proposes to remedy these shortcomings by drawing from Michel Foucault’s 'tool-box,' thus situating the book's analysis at the vital intersection between science and technology studies and the study of governmental rationality. Particularly for those of us who share Lemke’s ambivalence about new materialism, this book is an essential guide to the limits of this approach—and to avenues for productively combining it with other modes of inquiry."" -- Stephen J. Collier, co-author of The Government of Emergency: Vital Systems, Expertise, and the Politics of Security" At once an incisive critique of new materialisms and a timely extension of Michel Foucault’s analytics of government, Thomas Lemke’s The Government of Things is indispensable for anyone concerned with emerging forms of environmentality and the missing politics of the 'material turn.' By revisiting key terms in Foucault's later writings—dispositive, technology, milieu—and aligning an analytics of government with key insights from feminist and postcolonial science and technology studies, Lemke gives us powerful tools to analyze and historicize the dynamic socio-techno-ecological arrangements that differentially and unequally materialize human and nonhuman life and to imagine how they might be composed otherwise. -- Bruce Braun, co-editor of Political Matter: Technoscience, Democracy, and Public Life The Government of Things is an invaluable exploration and appraisal of new materialist approaches, advancing the argument that, while such approaches have much to offer, they also have distinctive weaknesses in handling questions of history and politics. Thomas Lemke proposes to remedy these shortcomings by drawing from Michel Foucault’s 'tool-box,' thus situating the book's analysis at the vital intersection between science and technology studies and the study of governmental rationality. Particularly for those of us who share Lemke’s ambivalence about new materialism, this book is an essential guide to the limits of this approach—and to avenues for productively combining it with other modes of inquiry. -- Stephen J. Collier, co-author of The Government of Emergency: Vital Systems, Expertise, and the Politics of Security In that Thomas Lemke’s book, The Government of Things: Foucault and the New Materialisms, supports my view for a materialist reading of Foucault, it constitutes a welcome addition to the literature. -- Mark Olssen * Special Forces * The Government of Things allows for a very fruitful encounter between Foucault and new material concerns. While the ultimate trajectory of Lemke's analytic of the government of things is a bit unclear, it should not be doubted that he has produced a remarkable piece of scholarship that will continue to generate innovative readings of Foucault. -- Conor Bean * Foucault Studies * Author InformationThomas Lemke is Professor of Sociology at the Faculty of Social Sciences at Goethe University Frankfurt. He is author of A Critique of Political Reason: Foucault’s Analysis of Modern Governmentality and Biopolitics: An Advanced Introduction. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |