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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Brendan Moran (University of Calgary, Canada) , Carlo Salzani (Monash University, Australia)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.549kg ISBN: 9781472523242ISBN 10: 1472523245 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 27 August 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsAbbreviations The Contributors Introduction: On the Actuality of the ‘Critique of Violence’ Brendan Moran and Carlo Salzani Part I: Benjamin’s Critique of Violence 1. Techniques of Agreement, Diplomacy, Lying Bettine Menke 2. The Ambiguity of Ambiguity in Benjamin’s ‘Critique of Violence’, Alison Ross 3. Benjamin’s Niobe, Amir Ahmadi 4. Nature, Decision, and Muteness, Brendan Moran 5. Variations of Fate Antonia Birnbaum Part II: Agamben’s Readings of Benjamin 6. From Benjamin’s bloßes Leben to Agamben’s nuda vita: A Genealogy, Carlo Salzani 7. Agamben’s Critique of Sacrificial Violence, J. Colin McQuillan 8. Agamben, Benjamin and the Indifference of Violence, William Watkin 9. Suchness and the Threshold between Possession and Violence, Paolo Bartoloni 10. Violence Without Law? On Pure Violence as a Destituent Power, Thanos Zartaloudis 11. The Anarchist Life we are Already Living: Benjamin and Agamben on Bare Life and the Resistance to Sovereignty, James R. Martel 12. Benjamin and Agamben on Kafka, Judaism and the Law, Vivian Liska 13. Expropriated Experience: Agamben Reading Benjamin, Reading Kant Alex Murray Appendix On the Limits of Violence Giorgio Agamben IndexReviewsAgamben's relationship with Walter Benjamin is decisive and yet complex, and this is above all the case for Benjamin's 'Critique of Violence,' a dense text in its own right. In this volume centered on Benjamin's 'Critique' and Agamben's reading of it, the authors make significant contributions to our understanding of a text that has attained an urgent 'legibility' in the present moment and of a contemporary intellectual project that at once extends and betrays it. Adam Kotsko, Assistant Professor of Humanities, Shimer College, USA The articles in this volume take up the challenge of rereading Benjamin after Agamben, and do so with the utmost seriousness, erudition, argumentativeness and incisiveness. Clarifying without simplifying, and extending without falsification, this collection will be indispensable not only for students and scholars of Benjamin and Agamben, but for its critical discussions concerning the relations between myth, law, violence nand justice. Justin Dominic Clemens, Senior Lecturer in the School of Culture and Communication at the University of Melbourne, Australia A rich collection that sometimes articulates existing problems in a new light, sometimes opens up unexpected contexts for the interpretation of both Benjamin and Agamben, at other times points towards directions that their work may be taken to. ... As such, it is a welcome addition to the growing body of Agamben (and Benjamin) scholarship. Arcadia Agamben's relationship with Walter Benjamin is decisive and yet complex, and this is above all the case for Benjamin's 'Critique of Violence,' a dense text in its own right. In this volume centered on Benjamin's 'Critique' and Agamben's reading of it, the authors make significant contributions to our understanding of a text that has attained an urgent 'legibility' in the present moment and of a contemporary intellectual project that at once extends and betrays it. Adam Kotsko, Assistant Professor of Humanities, Shimer College, USA The articles in this volume take up the challenge of rereading Benjamin after Agamben, and do so with the utmost seriousness, erudition, argumentativeness and incisiveness. Clarifying without simplifying, and extending without falsification, this collection will be indispensable not only for students and scholars of Benjamin and Agamben, but for its critical discussions concerning the relations between myth, law, violence nand justice. Justin Dominic Clemens, Senior Lecturer in the School of Culture and Communication at the University of Melbourne, Australia Author InformationBrendan Moran is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Calgary, Canada. Carlo Salzani is a translator and author based in Münster, Germany and editor, with Brendan Moran, of Philosophy and Kafka (2013). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |