Artigo Revisado por pares

Office and Agamben’s genealogy of economy and government

2017; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 4; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/23254823.2017.1300542

ISSN

2325-4823

Autores

Mitchell Dean,

Tópico(s)

Hannah Arendt's Political Philosophy

Resumo

This paper locates Giorgio Agamben's book Opus Dei in his larger Homo Sacer project and particularly a series of genealogical and archaeological studies within it. It argues for a disenchanted and dispersed reading of Agamben's approach to office as a resource for concerns that are germane to cultural and political sociology and that are irreducible to Heideggerian metaphysics. This reading foregrounds methodological questions of genealogy and archaeology (and hence Agamben's relation to Foucault), religious liturgy and political practice, and the theory of the priesthood as a paradigm for office. More broadly, Agamben's work on office is shown to bear upon questions of the constitution of sovereignty and government as forms of power, on different forms of rationalisation, and themes of secularisation and modernity found in classical sociology and intellectual history.

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