Authority, Experience and the Life of Power
Taking up the challenge of understanding power in its complexity, this volume returns to and revitalises the concept of authority. It provides a powerful analysis of the ways that relationships of trust, attachment, governance and inequality become possible when subjectivities and bodies are invested in the life of power. The collection offers a vibrant new analysis of the biopolitical, arguing that experience of life has become equated with objectivity in contemporary culture and has thus become a primary basis of authority. Biopolitical or experiential authority can be generated through reference to a variety of experiences, performances or intensities of life including creativity, radicalism, risk-taking, experimentation, inter-relation, suffering and proximity to death. The authority-producing capacities of community and aesthetics are key issues, pointing to vexed relationships between politics and policing, inventiveness and violence.
The contributors develop their theoretical analyses through discussion of a range of specific sites including mental-health service user and survivor politics, biological knowledge, refugee activism, stories of suffering, urban art, anarchism, neo-liberal community politics and marketisation. Authority, Experience and the Life of Power challenges thinking on what the political is and isnt, pushing against the all too easy equivocation of revolutionary break and empowerment.
This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Political Power.
Claire Blencowe is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Warwick. Her book Biopolitical Experience: Foucault, Power & Positive Critique was published with Palgrave in 2012.
Julian Brigstocke is a Lecturer in Human Geography at Cardiff University. His book The Life of the City: Space, Humour and the Experience of Truth in Fin-de-sicle Montmartre was published with Ashgate in 2014.
Leila Dawney is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Environment and Technology at the University of Brighton. Her research interests include geographies of affect and embodied practice, performance and landscape, Spinoza and new materialist theory, and the relationship between authority and community.
In the literature on power there has been a tendency to interpret power as domination, thus the opposite of authority. In this important collection of articles the authors challenge this viewpoint, arguing that power and authority structure everyday life in a mutually constitutive manner. Power and authority become an ontological category, which defines our being-in-the-social-world. As such, this collection makes a significant contribution to contemporary debates in social theory.
Mark Haugaard, Professor of Politics and Sociology,
National University of Ireland.
To understand power you must also grasp the problematic and productive dimensions of authority. Seeing authority as both cultural imperatives people are called upon to obey or resist, and as a set of passive syntheses through which our modes of perception and prejudgment are organised, the authors in this volume call on us to work upon those aspects that have been most ignored in the literature and politics of authority. A rich and provocative set of essays.
William E. Connolly, Krieger-Eisenhower Professor of
Political Science, Johns Hopkins University.
An original and inspiring set of reflections that raises important questions and opens up debates on positive power, authority, and community.
Kate Nash, Professor of Sociology, Goldsmiths,
University of London.
Authority, Experience and the Life of Power
Edited by
Claire Blencowe, Julian Brigstocke and Leila Dawney
First published 2015
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ISBN 13: 9781138809369
ePub eISBN 13: 9781317610847
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The publisher accepts responsibility for any inconsistencies that may have arisen during the conversion of this book from journal articles to book chapters, namely the possible inclusion of journal terminology.
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Contents
Claire Blencowe, Julian Brigstocke and Leila Dawney
Claire Blencowe
Leila Dawney
Tehseen Noorani
Samuel Kirwan
Naomi Millner
Julian Brigstocke
Thomas Osborne
Ian James
J.-D. Dewsbury
Chapters 1, Authority and experience and 2, Biopolitical authority, objectivity and the groundwork of modern citizenship were Open Access articles distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The moral rights of the named author(s) have been asserted.
The chapters in this book were originally published in the Journal of Political Power, volume 6, issue 1 (April 2013). When citing this material, please use the original page numbering for each article, as follows:
Chapter 1
Editorial: Authority and experience
Claire Blencowe, Julian Brigstocke and Leila Dawney
Journal of Political Power, volume 6, issue 1 (April 2013) pp. 18
Chapter 2
Biopolitical authority, objectivity and the groundwork of modern citizenship
Claire Blencowe
Journal of Political Power, volume 6, issue 1 (April 2013) pp. 928
Chapter 3
The figure of authority: the affective biopolitics of the mother and the dying man
Leila Dawney
Journal of Political Power, volume 6, issue 1 (April 2013) pp. 2948
Chapter 4
Service user involvement, authority and the expert-by-experience in mental health
Tehseen Noorani
Journal of Political Power, volume 6, issue 1 (April 2013) pp. 4968
Chapter 5