Particular rights and absolute wrongs : Giorgio Agamben on life and politics

Jessica Whyte

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    22 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Over the past decade, as human rights discourses have increasingly served to legitimize state militarism, a growing number of thinkers have sought to engage critically with the human rights project and its anthropological foundations. Amongst these thinkers, Giorgio Agamben's account of rights is possibly the most damning: human rights declarations, he argues, are biopolitical mechanisms that serve to inscribe life within the order of the nation state, and provide an earthly foundation for a sovereign power that is taking on a form redolent of the concentration camp. In this paper, I will examine Agamben's account of human rights declarations, which he sees as central to the modern collapse of the distinction between life and politics that had typified classical politics. I will then turn to the critique of Agamben offered by Jacques Ranciere, who suggests that Agamben's rejection of rights discourses is consequent to his adoption of Hannah Arendt's belief that, in order to establish a realm of freedom, the political realm must be premised on the expulsion of natural life. In contrast to Ranciere, I will argue that far from sharing the position of those thinkers, like Arendt, who seek to respond to the modern erosion of the borders between politics and life by resurrecting earlier forms of separation, Agamben sees the collapse of this border as the condition of possibility of a new, non-juridical politics.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)147-161
    Number of pages15
    JournalLaw and Critique
    Volume20
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2009

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