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Faculty Publication: The Living and the Dead: Disaffirming Biopolitics

September 19, 2022

Time to read: 2 minutes

Penn State UP, 2022

Stuart Murray

Arguing that biopower can be fully exposed only through an analysis of those whom society has “let die,” Stuart J.

The Living and the Dead: Disaffirming Biopolitics

Murray employs a series of transdisciplinary case studies to uncover the structural and rhetorical conditions through which biopower works. These case studies include the concept of “sacrifice” in the “war” against COVID-19, where emergent cultures of pandemic “resistance” are explored alongside suicide bombings and military suicides; the California mass hunger strikes of 2013; legal cases involving “preventable” and “untimely” childhood deaths, exposing the irreconcilable claims of anti-vaxxers and Indigenous peoples; and the videorecording of the death of a disabled Black man. Murray demonstrates that active resistance to biopower inevitably reproduces tropes of “making live” and “letting die.” His counter to this fact is a critical stance of disaffirmation, one in which death disrupts the politics politics of life itself.