@article{Muhle, author = {Muhle, Maria}, title = {The vitality of power. A genealogy of biopolitics with Foucault and Canguilhem}, series = {Revista de Ciencia Politica}, journal = {Revista de Ciencia Politica}, doi = {10.4067/S0718-090X2009000100008}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20170428-31735}, pages = {143 -- 163}, abstract = {This text proposes a genealogy of biopolitics based on Michel Foucault's thought, and on an understanding of it as a philosophico-political notion. In order to elaborate this genealogy, the text takes as its starting point not only politics but also life, as the second component of the term. The hypothesis is the following: To understand what biopolitics means, we have to take seriously Foucault's assertion of an indetermination of life, as the correlate of power and knowledge. This notion emerges in the epistemic break that takes place around 1800 and that entails the opening up of the notion of biopolitics under the name of governmentality, implying that life is not only the object of biopolitics but also serves as its model.}, subject = {Biopolitik}, language = {es} } @article{Morawski, author = {Morawski, Tommaso}, title = {La tavola e la mappa. Paradigmi per una metaforologia mediale dell'immaginazione cartografica in Kant}, series = {Philosophy Kitchen}, volume = {2022}, journal = {Philosophy Kitchen}, number = {17, II/2022}, publisher = {Universit{\`a} degli Studi di Torino}, address = {Turino}, doi = {10.13135/2385-1945/7191}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20230124-48766}, pages = {137 -- 152}, abstract = {Immanuel Kant's thought is a central historical and theoretical reference in Hans Blumenberg's metaphorological project. This is demonstrated by the fact that in the Paradigms the author outlines the concept of absolute metaphor by explicitly referring to \S59 of the Critique of the Power of Judgment and recognizing in the Kantian symbol a model for his own metaphorics. However, Kant's name also appears in the chapter on the metaphor of the "terra incognita" that not only did he theorize the presence of symbolic hypotyposis in our language [...] but also made extensive use of metaphors linked to "determinate historical experiences". In particular: geographical metaphors. In my essay, I would like to start from the analysis of Kant's geographical metaphors in order to try to rethink Blumenberg's archaeological method as an archaeology of media that grounds the study of metaphors in the materiality of communication and the combination of tools, agents and media.}, subject = {Kant, Immanuel}, language = {it} }