After Monsters of Biopolitics

Authors

  • Isabel Balza Universidad de Jaén

Abstract

In this paper I examine the figure of the monster, in both its negative and positive aspects, such as the notion of biopolitics. As a negative figure, the monster would represent the dehumanized subject produced by exclusion mechanisms operating in destructive version of biopolitics, resulting in thanatopolitics, and in this sense provokes horror and abjection. Here I will use the analyses of the anthropological machine (Agamben), the device of the person (Esposito) and indefinite detention (Butler). As a positive figure, the monster would represent the new subject trying to articulate productive versions of biopolitics, and is distinguished by its metamorphic and posthuman appearance, and in this sense would be subject and object of joy. Finally, as a project of affirmative biopolitics, I discuss Butler"™s proposal of a new way of thinking about the political community that assumes the original vulnerability of the subject.

Author Biography

Isabel Balza, Universidad de Jaén

Profesora de Filosofía Moral

Published

2013-05-31

How to Cite

Balza, I. (2013). After Monsters of Biopolitics. Dilemata, (12), 27–46. Retrieved from https://dilemata.net/revista/index.php/dilemata/article/view/214