Synopses & Reviews
In Frames of War, Judith Butler explores the media"s portrayal of state violence, a process integral to the way in which the West wages modern war. 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.
Review
It's clear that its author is still interested in stirring up trouble--academic, political and otherwise.Judith Butler is the most creative and courageous social theorist writing today. Frames of Waris an intellectual masterpiece that weds a new understanding of being, immersed in history, to a novel Left politics that focuses on State violence, war and resistance. -- Cornel West
Review
"An urgent yet characteristically thoughtful analysis of a media-managed reality that is both more controlled and more insecure than ever before." Mark Fisher
Review
Bracing close readings. -- Steven Poole
Review
Judith Butler is quite simply one of the most probing, challenging,and influential thinkers of our time. -- J. M. Bernstein
Review
One of the world"s leading thinkers ' We are, many of us, deeply indebted to a body of work that has illuminated issues at the very core of life, death, sexuality and existence. -- Angela McRobbie
Synopsis
Frames of Warbegins where Butler"s Precarious Livesleft off: on the idea that we cannot grieve for those lost lives that we never saw as lives to begin with. In this age of CNN-mediated war, the lives of those wretched populations of the earth'"the refugees; the victims of unjust imprisonment and torture; the immigrants virtually enslaved by their starvation and legal disenfranchisement'"are always presented to us as already irretrievable and thereby already lost. We may shake our heads at their wretchedness but then we sacrifice them nonetheless, for they are already forgone.
By analyzing the different frames through which we experience war, Butler calls for a reorientation of the Left toward the precarity of those lives. Only by recognizing those lives as precarious lives'"lives that are not yet lost but are ever fragile and in need of protection'"might the Left stand in unity against the violence perpetrated through arbitrary state power.
Synopsis
In this urgent response to violence, racism and increasingly aggressive methods of coercion, Judith Butler explores the media’s portrayal of armed conflict, a process integral to how the West prosecutes its wars. In doing so, she calls for a re-conceptualization of the Left, one united in opposition and resistance to the illegitimate and arbitrary effects of interventionist military action.
Synopsis
Renowned social theorist unmasks the media's insidious collaboration with the military-industrial complex.
Synopsis
Profound exploration of the current wars, looking at violence, gender and different forms of resistance.
About the Author
Judith Butler is Maxine Elliot Professor in the Departments of Rhetoric and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of Frames of War, Precarious Life, The Psychic Life of Power, Excitable Speech, Bodies that Matter, Gender Trouble, and with Slavoj iek and Ernesto Laclau, Contingency, Hegemony, Universality.