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The Force of Nonviolence: An…
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The Force of Nonviolence: An Ethico-Political Bind (edition 2021)

by Judith Butler (Author)

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2144128,157 (3.86)3
"Situating non-violence at the cross-roads of the ethical and political, The Force of Non-Violence brings into focus the ethical binds that emerge within the force field of violence. Non-violence is very often misunderstood as a passive practice that emanates from a calm region of the soul, or as an individualist ethic with an unrealistic relation to existing forms of power. This book argues for an aggressive form of non-violence that struggles with psychic ambivalence and seeks to embody social ideals of inter-dependency and equality. Only through a critique of individualism can the ethical and political ideal of non-violence be understood in relation to the ideal of equality and the demand for grievability. In this psychosocial and philosophical reflection that draws upon Foucault, Fanon, Freud, and Benjamin, Butler argues that to oppose violence now requires understanding its different modalities, including the regulation of the grievability of lives. The book shows how "racial and demographic phantasms" enter into the rationale for inflicting state violence and other modes of "letting die" by investing violence in those who are most severely exposed to its effects and subjugated to its lethal power. The struggle for non-violence is found in modes of resistance and movements for social transformation that separate off aggression from its destructive aims to affirm the living potentials of radical egalitarian politics"--… (more)
Member:ozfiztheweird
Title:The Force of Nonviolence: An Ethico-Political Bind
Authors:Judith Butler (Author)
Info:Verso (2021), Edition: Reprint, 224 pages
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The Force of Nonviolence: An Ethico-Political Bind by Judith Butler

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I wish Butler would have left Freud and Klein alone and stuck to her own actually compelling arguments in this one. ( )
  JBarringer | Dec 15, 2023 |
Comecei esse livro com grande interesse, mas fui tomado pela sensação de que o livro não estava mais me prendendo e que eu não estava, afora as ideias mais gerais, obtendo valor dos argumentos. Pois bem, o que Butler enfatiza é que a não-violência deve ser entendida sob o pano de fundo de uma igualdade radical: se toda vida surge entrelaçada em muitas, se toda vida é possibilitada o tempo todo por muitas outras, se nosso processo subjetivo e de identidade é sustentado por toda essa rede, que isso sirva para nos lembrar sempre que é a desigualdade de condições que gera as diferenças em termos de liberdades (sintéticas); que todas as vidas humanas tem valor e todas por isso tem de ser passíveis de luto, todas ao alcance da tristeza. Assim, para que a violência e também assim a não-violência não seja aprisionada em um viés e seus embates, em uma luta de uns contra outros, em justificações permissivas, é preciso partir da luta pela igualdade, da co-participação das vidas nas formações subjetivas. Assim, se a violência rompe a interdependência das vidas como se isso fosse possível, mascarando esse processo constitutivo de modo destrutivo, temos que almejar por algo melhor. ( )
  henrique_iwao | Aug 30, 2022 |
In this book, Judith Butler has created a masterpiece of philosophy for the 21st Century.

Drawing together her life's work in varied areas from language to feminism, from trans rights to racism, she has constructed a concrete, legible and intense theory of collaborative existence that draws from all of these ideas to create a powerful, insightful book.

Two stand-out points dominate a theory that in few words has drawn together a lifetime of thought. (1) That a life has little value if it is not deemed to be worth grieving ("grievability") and (2) that violence is justified within the extent to how much we grieve a loss. This grievability is extended to all living things, from person to person, from society to society, from people to other organisms. And the clarity with which Butler has uncovered and shared all of this is spellbinding.

A book for the ages.

A brilliant, more in-depth review in light of the COVID-19 pandemic by Jennifer Carlson is worth a read too: https://jdawncarlson.com/2020/03/11/the-force-of-nonviolence-covid-19-and-the-am... ( )
  ephemeral_future | Aug 20, 2020 |
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"Situating non-violence at the cross-roads of the ethical and political, The Force of Non-Violence brings into focus the ethical binds that emerge within the force field of violence. Non-violence is very often misunderstood as a passive practice that emanates from a calm region of the soul, or as an individualist ethic with an unrealistic relation to existing forms of power. This book argues for an aggressive form of non-violence that struggles with psychic ambivalence and seeks to embody social ideals of inter-dependency and equality. Only through a critique of individualism can the ethical and political ideal of non-violence be understood in relation to the ideal of equality and the demand for grievability. In this psychosocial and philosophical reflection that draws upon Foucault, Fanon, Freud, and Benjamin, Butler argues that to oppose violence now requires understanding its different modalities, including the regulation of the grievability of lives. The book shows how "racial and demographic phantasms" enter into the rationale for inflicting state violence and other modes of "letting die" by investing violence in those who are most severely exposed to its effects and subjugated to its lethal power. The struggle for non-violence is found in modes of resistance and movements for social transformation that separate off aggression from its destructive aims to affirm the living potentials of radical egalitarian politics"--

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