The Ethical subject of security. Geopolitical reason and the threat against Europe.

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Publication Date 2011
ISBN 978-0-415-49982-8 (Hbk)
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While critical security studies largely concentrates on objects of security, this book focuses on the subject position from which ‘securitization’ and other security practices take place.

First, it argues that the modern subject itself emerges and is sustained as a function of security and insecurity. It suggests, consequently, that no analytic frame can produce or reproduce the subject in some original or primordial form that does not already reproduce a fundamental or structural insecurity. It critically returns, through a variety of studies, to traditionally held conceptions of security and insecurity as simple predicates or properties that can be associated or not to some more essential, more primeval, more true or real subject. It thus opens and explores the question of the security of the subject itself, locating, through a reconstruction of the foundations of the concept of security, in the modern conception of the subject, an irreducible insecurity.

Second, it argues that practices of security can only be carried out as a certain kind of negotiation about values. The analyses in this book find security expressed again and again as a function of value cast in terms of an explicit or implicit philosophy of life, of culture, of individual and collective anxieties and aspirations, of expectations about what may be sacrificed and what is worth preserving. By way of a critical examination of the value function of security, this book discovers the foundation of values as dependent on a certain management of their own vulnerability, continuously under threat, and thus fundamentally and necessarily insecure.

This book will be a resource for students of Critical Security Studies, Political Theory, Philosophy, Ethics and International Relations in general.

Contents:

Introduction: Security as Ethos and Episteme

Part 1: Theory of the Ethical Subject
1. Nietzsche, or Value and the Subject of Security
2. Foucault, or Genealogy of the Ethical Subject
3. Lacan, or the Ethical Subject of the Real
4. Butler, or the Precarious Subject

Part 2: Holding Together
5. Identity, Community and Security
6. Insecurity of the European Community of Values
7. Psychoanalysis of the National Thing
8. Security Clture and the New Ethos of Risk
9. Intolerable Insecurity Part 3: Geopolitical Rationalities of Europe
10. The Modernity of a Cosmopolitan Europe
11. The New Nomos of Europe
12. A Federalist Europe between Economic and Cultural Value 13. Justice in Political, Legal and Moral Community
14. War in the Name of Europe and the Legitimacy of Collective Violence.
Conclusion: The Many Faces of European Security

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