Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable? (Radical Thinkers)

by Judith Butler

Paperback, 2016

Status

Checked out

Publication

Verso (2016), Edition: Reprint, 224 pages

Description

This portrayal has saturated our understanding of human life, and has led to the exploitation and abandonment of whole peoples, who are cast as existential threats rather than as living populations in need of protection. These people are framed as already lost, to imprisonment, unemployment and starvation, and can easily be dismissed. In the twisted logic that rationalizes their deaths, the loss of such populations is deemed necessary to protect the lives of 'the living.' This disparity, Butler argues, has profound implications for why and when we feel horror, outrage, guilt, loss and righteous indifference, both in the context of war and, increasingly, everyday life. This book discerns the resistance to the frames of war in the context of the images from Abu Ghraib, the poetry from Guantanamo, recent European policy on immigration and Islam, and debates on normativity and non-violence. In this urgent response to ever more dominant methods of coercion, violence and racism, Butler calls for a re-conceptualization of the Left, one that brokers cultural difference and cultivates resistance to the illegitimate and arbitrary effects of state violence and its vicissitudes.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member karl.steel
Apart from a too lengthy engagement w/ Susan Sontag on photography (which might better have been excerpted in an anthology or special issue dedicated to ethics and photography), Frames of War for the most part advances only very incrementally points already made in Precarious Life, which really
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should have just been redone in a substantially revised and expanded form.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

2009

Physical description

224 p.; 5.2 inches

ISBN

1784782475 / 9781784782474
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