Bioviolence: How the Powers That Be Make Us Do What They Want
ISBN: 9781003006015
Platform/Publisher: Taylor & Francis / Routledge
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited

Subjects: Humanities; Politics & International Relations; Social Sciences; Introductory Politics; International Relations; Political Philosophy; Philosophy; Government; Political Theory; Politics & the Media; Political Behavior and Participation; Anthropology - Soc Sci; Sociology & Social Policy; Political Philosophy; Political Institutions; Political Lobbying & Interest Groups; Revolution - Government; Global Governance; International Relations Theory; Political Ideologies; Democracy; Fascism & Nazism; Human Rights; Social Democracy; Modern Political Theory; Political Communication; Political Psychology; Public Opinion; Social Movements; Globalisation; Social & Cultural Anthropology; Political Sociology; Social Class; Sociology of Media; Sociology of Culture; Sociology of Science & Technology;


Aylan, Isis, Begum, Grenfell, Trump. Harambe, Guantanamo, Syria, Brexit, Johnson. COVID, migrants, trolling, George Floyd, Trump!

Gazing over the fractured, contested territories of the current global situation, Watkin finds that all these diverse happenings have one element in common. They occur when biopolitical states, in trying to manage and protect the life rights of their citizens, habitually end up committing acts of coercion or disregard against the very people they have promised to protect. When states tasked with making us live find themselves letting us die, then they are practitioners of a particular kind of force that Watkin calls bioviolence.

This book explores and exposes the many aspects of contemporary biopower and bioviolence: neglect, exclusion, surveillance, regulation, encampment, trolling, fake news, terrorism and war. As it does so, it demonstrates that the very term 'violence' is a discursive construct, an effect of language, made real by our behaviours, embodied by our institutions and disseminated by our technologies. In short, bioviolence is how the contemporary powers that be make us do what they want.

Resolutely interdisciplinary, this book is suitable for all scholars, students and general readers in the fields of IR, political theory, philosophy, the humanities, sociology and journalism.


William Watkin is Professor of Contemporary Philosophy and Literature at Brunel University, London. He is the author of numerous books including In the Process of Poetry: The New York School and the Avant-Garde , On Mourning , The Literary Agamben and Agamben and Indifference . His most recent work Badiou and Indifferent Being is the first of two volumes looking at Badiou's Being and Event project. The second, Badiou and Communicable Worlds, came out in 2020. He is currently working on a study of a philosophy of indifference called, simply, Indifference , and a follow-up to Bioviolence called Anti-Social Media: How Big Tech Makes Us Do What It Wants.

hidden image for function call