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[ecrea] New Book Announcement: Archives of the Insensible: of War Photopolitics and Dead Memory
Wed Nov 18 23:10:10 GMT 2015
Archives of the Insensible
OF WAR, PHOTOPOLITICS, AND DEAD MEMORY
Archives of the Insensible
ALLEN FELDMAN
<http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/author/F/A/au5841521.html>
432 pages | 31 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2015
In this jarring look at contemporary warfare and political visuality,
renowned anthropologist of violence Allen Feldman provocatively argues
that contemporary sovereign power mobilizes asymmetric, clandestine,
and ultimately unending war as a will to truth. Whether responding to
the fantasy of weapons of mass destruction or an existential threat to
civilization, Western political sovereignty seeks to align justice,
humanitarian right, and democracy with technocratic violence and
visual dominance. Connecting Guantánamo tribunals to the South African
Truth and Reconciliation Commission, American counterfeit killings in
Afghanistan to the Baader-Meinhof paintings of Gerhard Richter, and
the video erasure of Rodney King to lynching photography and political
animality, among other scenes of terror, Feldman contests
sovereignty’s claims to transcendental right —whether humanitarian,
neoliberal, or democratic—by showing how dogmatic truth is crafted and
terror indemnified by the prosecutorial media and materiality of war.
Excavating a scenography of trials—formal or covert, orchestrated or
improvised, criminalizing or criminal—Feldman shows how the will to
truth disappears into the very violence it interrogates. He maps the
sensory inscriptions and erasures of war, highlighting war as a media
that severs factuality from actuality to render violence just. He
proposes that war promotes an anesthesiology that interdicts the
witness of a sensory and affective commons that has the capacity to
speak truth to war. Feldman uses layered deconstructive description to
decelerate the ballistical tempo of war to salvage the embodied
actualities and material histories that war reduces to the ashes of
collateral damage, the automatism of drones, and the opacities of
black sites. The result is a penetrating work that marries critical
visual theory, political philosophy, anthropology, and media
archeology into a trenchant dissection of emerging forms of
sovereignty and state power that war now makes possible.
Close
<http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/A/bo20619377.html#>
* REVIEW QUOTES
<http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/A/bo20619377.html#tab-quotes>
*Avital Ronell, Loser Sons: Politics and Authority*
“Feldman delivers an essential dossier on the conceptual
straitjacketing to which every terrestrial being, whether ethically
bound or in the wild, is currently subjected. Scouring the political
unconscious with exquisite precision and sovereign decisiveness—all
the while leaving intact the blurs and shudders of discursive power
failures—/Archives of the Insensible/ will become the go-to work to
help us confront unmanageably traumatizing realities by which we are
seized and the cutthroat politics of our era. From media-theoretical
downloads to subtle philosophical sting operations, the book doesn’t
let up. /Ever./”
*Talal Asad, author of On Suicide Bombing*
“/Archives of the Insensible/ is a remarkable diagnosis of our time,
tracing with great subtlety the multiple ways in which violence is
transformed into justice and justice gives birth to destruction. This
is a startling book written with passion and insight, and a valuable
contribution to our understanding of the relationship of violence to
international law in the contemporary world.”
*Jonathan Beller, author of The Cinematic Mode of Production*
“The indefatigable rigor with which Feldman limns the media, archives,
practices, and metaphysics of contemporary sovereignty, along with its
myriad forms of victimage, has the potential to educate and inspire a
generation or more of counter-hegemonic, social-justice workers across
multiple institutions, media, and national contexts. Feldman
relentlessly pursues a mode of geopolitically emergent sovereignty
that is fundamentally inseparable from war, terror, torture,
clandestinity, and the programmed prohibition of the comprehension of
these violent processes.”
*Anthropology: *Cultural and Social Anthropology
<http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/subject/su2/su2_1.html>
*Film Studies* <http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/subject/su21.html>
*Media Studies* <http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/subject/su39.html>
*Political Science: *Political and Social Theory
<http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/subject/su48/su48_6.html>
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