Was Thomas Hobbes the first biopolitical thinker?
Lindholm, S. (2023). Was Thomas Hobbes the first biopolitical thinker?. History of the Human Sciences, 36(3-4), 221-241. https://doi.org/10.1177/09526951231159260
Published in
History of the Human SciencesAuthors
Date
2023Copyright
© The Author(s) 2023
Thomas Hobbes's name often comes up as scholars debate the history of biopower, which regulates the biological life of individual bodies and entire populations. This article examines whether and to what extent Hobbes may be regarded as the first biopolitical philosopher. I investigate this question by performing a close reading of Hobbes's political texts and by comparing them to some of the most influential theories on biopolitics proposed by Michel Foucault, Giorgio Agamben, Roberto Esposito, and others. Hobbes is indeed the first great thinker to assert the supreme political importance of safeguarding life. Furthermore, this prominence of non-contemplative life is not limited to mere survival but also seeks to allow for the people's happiness. This may indeed allow us to consider him as the first biopolitical philosopher, at least in some limited capacity. However, the Englishman's biopolitical stance lacks the practical aspects seen in examples of ‘properly modern’ biopolitics. Moreover, peoples’ lives were already governed radically in antiquity. I argue that Hobbes's biopolitical system was, therefore, minimal in the sense of a ‘biopolitical nightwatchman state’. However, he acted as an undeniable catalyst to the ‘properly biopolitical era of modernity’, when mundane life and happiness became the explicit main objects of virtually all politics.
...
Publisher
SAGE PublicationsISSN Search the Publication Forum
0952-6951Keywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/182906097
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Additional information about funding
This work was supported by the Suomen Kulttuurirahasto, Alfred Kordelinin Säätiö.License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Introduction
Backman, Jussi; Cimino, Antonio (Oxford University Press, 2022)In the introduction to the volume, the editors explain the overarching aim of the volume and contextualize the main themes of its chapters. Even if the notions of biopolitics and biopower have played a crucial role in ... -
When did biopolitics begin? : Actuality and potentiality in historical events
Prozorov, Sergei (SAGE Publications, 2022)The article addresses the ongoing debate about the origins of biopolitics. While Foucault’s analysis of biopolitics approached it as a modern rationality of government, Agamben’s Homo Sacer series presented biopolitics as ... -
From Biopolitics to Biopoetics and Back Again : On a Counterintuitive Continuity in Foucault’s Thought
Prozorov, Sergei (Oxford University Press, 2022)The chapter addresses the relation between Michel Foucault’s studies of biopolitics and his work on the ancient techniques of the self in the 1980s. It argues that Foucault’s distinction between biopoetics and biopolitics ... -
Giorgio Agamben’s Critique of the Covid-19 Response has Little to Do with Biopolitics
Lindholm, Samuel (Routledge, 2024)Giorgio Agamben claims that the aggressive coronavirus response in Italy turned the nation’s entire population into formless bare life, which was cast out from meaningful human existence through a sovereign exception. This ... -
Luther and Biopower : Rethinking the Reformation with Foucault
Lindholm, Samuel; Di Carlo, Andrea (Copenhagen Business School, 2024)In this article, we propose an alternative Foucauldian reading of Martin Luther’s thought and early Lutheranism. Michel Foucault did not mention the Reformation often, although he saw it as an amplification of pastoral ...