Necropolitics is a sociopolitical theory of the use of social and political power to dictate how some people may live and how some must die. The deployment of necropolitics creates what Achille Mbembe calls deathworlds, or "new and unique forms of social existence in which vast populations are subjected to living conditions that confer upon them the status of the living dead."[1] Mbembe, author of On the Postcolony, was the first scholar to explore the term in depth in his 2003 article,[2] and later, his 2019 book of the same name.[1] Mbembe identifies racism as a prime driver of necropolitics, stating that racialized people's lives are systemically cheapened and habituated to loss.[1]

Concept

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Necropolitics is often discussed as an extension of biopower, the Foucauldian term for the use of social and political power to control people's lives. Foucault first discusses the concepts of biopower and biopolitics in his 1976 work, The Will to Knowledge: The History of Sexuality Volume I.[3] Foucault presents biopower as a mechanism for "protecting", but acknowledges that this protection often manifests itself as subjugation of non-normative populations.[3] The creation and maintenance of institutions that prioritize certain populations as more valuable is, according to Foucault, how population control has been normalized.[3]

Mbembe's concept of necropolitics acknowledges that contemporary state-sponsored death cannot be explained by the theories of biopower and biopolitics, stating that "under the conditions of necropower, the lines between resistance and suicide, sacrifice and redemption, martyrdom and freedom are blurred."[2] Jasbir Puar assumes that discussions of biopolitics and necropolitics must be intertwined, because "the latter makes its presence known at the limits and through the excess of the former; [while] the former masks the multiplicity of its relationships to death and killing in order to enable the proliferation of the latter."[4]

Mbembe was clear that necropolitics is more than simply a right to kill (Foucault's droit de glaive). While his view of necropolitics does include various forms of political violence such as the right to impose social or civil death, and the right to enslave others, it is also about the right to expose other people (including a country's own citizens) to mortal danger and death.[2] Cultural theorist Lauren Berlant calls this gradual and persistent process of elimination slow death.[5][6] According to Berlant, only specific populations are "marked out for wearing out"[7] and the conditions of being worn out and dying are intimately linked with "the ordinary reproduction of [daily] life."[8]

Necropolitics is a theory of the walking dead, in which specific bodies are forced to remain in suspended states of being located somewhere between life and death. Mbembe provided a way of analyzing these "contemporary forms of subjugation of life to the power of death."[2] He utilized examples of slavery, apartheid, the colonization of Palestine and the figure of the suicide bomber to illustrate differing forms of necropower over the body (statist, racialized, a state of exception, urgency, martyrdom) and how this reduces people to precarious life conditions.[2]

According to Marina Gržinić, necropolitics precisely defines the forms taken by neo-liberal global capitalist cuts in financial support for public health, social and education structures. To her, these extreme cuts present intensive neo-liberal procedures of ‘rationalization’ and ‘civilization’.[9]

Living death

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Mbembe's understanding of sovereignty, according to which the living are characterized as "free and equal men and women," informs how he expands the definition of necropolitics to include not only individuals experiencing death, but also experiencing social or political death.[2] An individual unable to set their own limitations due to social or political interference is then considered, by Mbembe, to not be truly alive, as they are no longer sovereign over their own body.[2] The ability for a state to subjugate populations so much so that they do not have the liberty of autonomy over their lives is an example of necropolitics. This creates zones of existence for the living dead, those who no longer have sovereignty over their own body.[1] R. Guy Emerson writes that necropolitics exists beyond the limits of administrative or state power being imposed on bodies, but also becomes internalized, coming to control behaviors over fear of death or fear of exposure to death worlds.[10]

Frédéric Le Marcis discusses how the contemporary African prison system acts as an example of necropolitics.[11] Referring to the concept of living death as "stuckness", Le Marcis details life in prison as a state-sponsored creation of death; some examples he provides include malnourishment through a refusal to feed inmates, a lack of adequate healthcare, and the excusing of certain violent actions between inmates.[11] Racism, discussed by Foucault as an integral component of wielding biopower, is also present in Le Marcis' discussion of the necropolitical prison system, specifically regarding the ways in which murder and suicide are often overlooked among inmates.[11] Mbembe also contends that matters of homicide and suicide within state-governed institutions housing "less valuable" members of the necroeconomy are simply another example of social or political death.[2]

Ilana Feldman brings as an example the experience of Palestinian refugees in the situation of prolonged displacement. In her ethnographic work, a number of interviewees share how the combination of bad leadership, poor services in refugee camps and lack of international support resulted in a collective climate of hopelessness.[12]

Queer and trans necropolitics

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Jasbir Puar coined the term queer necropolitics to analyze the post-9/11 queer outrage regarding gay bashing and simultaneous queer complicity with Islamophobia.[4] Puar utilizes the discussions of Mbembe to address the dismissal of racism within the LGBTQ+ community as a form of assimilation and distancing from the non-normative populations generally affected by necropolitics.[4] Puar's research centers specifically on the idea that, "the homosexual other is white, the racial other is straight," leaving no room for queer people of color, and ultimately accepting their fate as a non-valuable population destined for social, political, or literal death.[4] Puar's prime example of this lives within the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, in which Israel, considered a haven for LGBTQ individuals, is then spared criticism from its Islamophobic violence against the Palestinian people, particularly queer Palestinians.[4]

Many scholars use Puar's queer necropolitics in conjunction with Judith Butler's concept of a grievable life.[13] Butler's discussion of the HIV/AIDS epidemic acts as a necessary extension of the queer necropolitical field, as it addresses specifically the shortcomings of Foucault's concept of biopower for non-normative, less societally valuable populations, those populations experiencing multiple intersections of Other-ness.[13] Butler connects the lives of queer individuals to that of, "war casualties that the United States inflicts," noting that one cannot publicly grieve these deaths because in order to do so, they must be deemed noteworthy by those who inflicted death upon them.[13] Butler claims that the obituary is a tool for normalizing the necropolitics of queer lives, as well as the lives of people of color.[13]

In “Trans Necropolitics: A Transnational Reflection on Violence, Death, and the Trans of Color Afterlife” Snorton and Haritaworn investigate the necropolitical nature of trans people of color's lives. As they make sense of “trans of color afterlife,” Snorton and Haritaworn examine the ‘making dead’ of trans people of color, and especially trans women of color, as an intentionally violent political strategy. This reveals society's incredible failure to protect and care for trans people of color during their lives.[14]

Necroviolence

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Necroviolence is used both as a terms among academics, stemming from the necropolitics concept, as well in some press coverage and in United Nations documentation regarding the Israel–Palestine conflict.[15][16][17]

As defined by anthropologist Jason De León refers to “violence performed through the specific treatment of corpses” in ways that are offensive and enable "the powerful" to deny responsibility for the death.[18][19]

Israeli "necroviolence" against Palestinians

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In Gaza–Israel conflict

Israeli forces have been accused of necroviolence in 2020 in Gaza, including violently scooping up a corpse with a bulldozer.[20]

Ongoing Israeli necroviolence methods
Student of MA International Conflict Studies at King's College London Aymun Moosavi[21] and Harvard PhD candidate in anthropology Randa May Wahbe have described Israeli necroviolence as including:[22]

  • ‘Ambiguous loss’; withholding Palestinian bodies in freezers, thus preventing Palestinian families from mourning their loved ones
  • The cemeteries of numbers (cemeteries where graves are marked only with numbers and not names, thus dehumanizing the dead)
  • Demolition of historic grave sites

Against trans and gender-diverse people

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In the academic article Necropolitics and Trans Identities: Language Use as Structural Violence, authors Kinsey Stewart and Thomas Delgado argue that language can also harm the dead and that the (mis)use of language within medicolegal death investigation reflects and reinforces structural violence against transgender and gender diverse people.[23]

Further developments

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Khaled Al-Kassimi, author of International Law, Necropolitics, and Arab Lives[24], has recently expanded the theoretical framework of necropolitics by engaging in an epistemic inquiry deconstructing the philosophical and theological reasons as to why Western modernity necessitates deploying "necropower" for onto-epistemic coherence.[25] In doing so, Al-Kassimi mentions that while racism is a material explanation to the exercise of necropolitics, it is the epistemic schism between both "spiritual Arabia" and "secular Europe" that demands the latter to "ban" the former from the juridical order and render them the "living-dead".[25] By navigating Latin-European scholastics in the 15th century, including the positivist juridical turn during and after the Enlightenment period emphasizing Reason over Revelation, Al-Kassimi concludes that, "Arab epistemology emphasiz[ing] the spiritual rather than simply the material"[25] requires "secular" Western modernity to demand the elevation of Arab subjects to the exception and rendering them through technologies of racism and essentialist narratives as "bare-life", "Muselmann", or the "living-dead"; that is, objects of sovereign necropower.[25]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Mbembe, Achille (October 2019). Necropolitics. Durham: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-1-4780-0651-0.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Mbembe, Achille (2003). "Necropolitics" (PDF). Public Culture. 15 (1): 11–40. doi:10.1215/08992363-15-1-11. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-10-10.
  3. ^ a b c Foucault, Michel (1978). The Will to Knowledge: The History of Sexuality Volume I. London: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-012474-8.
  4. ^ a b c d e Puar, Jasbir K. (2007). Terrorist assemblages: homonationalism in queer times. Durham: Duke University Press. pp. 32–79. ISBN 9780822340942.
  5. ^ Bratich, Jack Z. (2022). On microfascism : gender, war, and death. Brooklyn, NY. p. 10. ISBN 978-1-94217-349-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ Berlant, Lauren (Summer 2007). "Slow Death". Critical Inquiry. 33 (4): 754. doi:10.1086/521568. S2CID 161102783. The phrase slow death refers to the physical wearing out of a population and the deterioration of people in that population that is very nearly a defining condition of their experience and historical existence.
  7. ^ Berlant, Lauren (Summer 2007). "Slow Death". Critical Inquiry. 33 (4): 761.
  8. ^ Berlant, Lauren (Summer 2007). "Slow Death". Critical Inquiry. 33 (4): 762.
  9. ^ "Necropolitics - ECPS".
  10. ^ Guy Emerson, R. (2019). Necropolitics: Living Death in Mexico. Springer. pp. 2–3. ISBN 9783030123024.
  11. ^ a b c Le Marcis, Frédéric (2019). "Life in a Space of Necropolitics: Toward an Economy of Value in Prisons". Ethnos. 84 (1): 74–95. doi:10.1080/00141844.2018.1428207. S2CID 217508904.
  12. ^ Feldman, Ilana (October 2018). Life Lived in Relief. The University of California Press. ISBN 9780520299634.
  13. ^ a b c d Butler, Judith (2004). Precarious life: the powers of mourning and violence. London: Verso. pp. 20–35. ISBN 978-1844670055.
  14. ^ C. Riley Snorton; Jin Haritaworn (2013). "Trans Necropolitics: A Transnational Reflection on Violence, Death, and the Trans of Color Afterlife". In Susan Stryker; Aren Aizura (eds.). Transgender Studies Reader (2nd ed.). New York: Routledge.
  15. ^ "Israel even criminalizes dead Palestinian bodies". Mondoweiss. 2 September 2021. Retrieved 20 January 2024.
  16. ^ "Shaky ceasefire holds between Islamic Jihad, Israel in Gaza". Al Jazeera. Retrieved 20 January 2024.
  17. ^ "General Assembly Security Council Tenth emergency special session, Agenda item 5, Illegal Israeli actions in Occupied East Jerusalem and the rest of the Occupied Palestinian Territory: Identical letters dated 7 October 2021 from the Permanent Observer of the State of Palestine to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General, the President of the General Assembly and the President of the Security Council" (PDF). 7 October 2021. Retrieved 20 January 2024. Alaa's killing occurred a few days after Israeli occupation forces killed five Palestinians and kidnapped their bodies in line with Israel's necroviolence campaign of withholding the bodies of Palestinians killed by its occupying forces, tormenting the dead and the families that they have left behind. We mourn the loss of these men and call upon the international community, particularly the Security Council, to act immediately to bring an end to the occupation's cold-blooded killing of Palestinian civilians and its decades-old necroviolence policy, which violates the dignity of the dead and is tantamount to collective punishment, as families are prohibited from burying their loved ones in accordance with cultural and religious rituals.
  18. ^ "THE LAND OF OPEN GRAVES: LIVING AND DYING ON THE MIGRANT TRAIL". Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Book Reviews. 6 March 2017. Retrieved 12 January 2024.
  19. ^ De León, Jason (2015). The Land of Open Graves : Living and Dying on the Migrant Trail. Oakland, California: University of California Press. p. 69. ISBN 9780520282759. OCLC 908448301.
  20. ^ Linah Alsaafin, “ Israel slammed for necroviolence on bodies of Palestinians”, Al-Jazeera. February 24, 2020
  21. ^ "Necroviolence in Palestine". Words of Solidarity. Retrieved 17 January 2024.
  22. ^ Wahbe, Randa May (September 2020). "The politics of karameh: Palestinian burial rites under the gun". Critique of Anthropology. 40 (3): 323–340. doi:10.1177/0308275X20929401. S2CID 220751392. Retrieved 17 January 2024.
  23. ^ Stewart, Kinsey B.; Delgado, Thomas A. (2023). "Necropolitics and Trans Identities: Language Use as Structural Violence". Humans. 3 (2): 106–125. doi:10.3390/humans3020010.
  24. ^ "Khaled Al-Kassimi - Routledge & CRC Press Author Profile". www.routledge.com. Retrieved 2024-03-07.
  25. ^ a b c d Al-Kassimi, Khaled (2022-10-27). International Law, Necropolitics, and Arab Lives: The Legalization of Creative Chaos in Arabia. London: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781003306375. ISBN 978-1-003-30637-5.

Further reading

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