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The biopolitics of precarity and the self

Donna McCormack*, Suvi Salmenniemi

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This Special Issue explores the biopolitics of precarity and the self. In so doing, its aim is to critically examine the changing landscape of technologies of the self and techniques of domination in late capitalism. It brings Foucault’s work on biopolitics into conversation with recent feminist, Marxist, postcolonial, disability and queer scholarship on precarity. In a feminist tradition of thinking through relationality and ethics, this Special Issue engages with those moments when technologies of regulation, surveillance and normalization do not quite work. ‘The Biopolitics of Precarity and the Self’ analyzes recent debates on precarity and precariousness in relation to migration and labour, health and illness, and the formation of the self and collectivities. It identifies temporality and care of both the self and others as key dimensions of precarity and explores how biopolitical structures of neoliberal capitalism institutionalize precarity that exacerbates existing global and local inequalities. We therefore raise questions around what it means to live, endure, survive and make life and labour possible without doing harm to the self or others. In this sense, this Special Issue brings to the fore the temporalities, politics and ethics of what is not always recognized in biomedical practices, labour migrations, media representations, labour of the self and everyday agency.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3-15
Number of pages13
JournalEuropean Journal of Cultural Studies
Volume19
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2016

Funding

This Special Issue originates from a symposium “Rethinking the Self: Transnational and Transdisciplinary Bioethical and Biopolitical concerns” organized at the University of Helsinki in 2012. We are grateful to Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies for financial support to organizing the symposium.

Keywords

  • ethics
  • Judith Butler
  • Lauren Berlant
  • precarity
  • the self
  • biopolitics

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