Updated 05-May-2020.
Mondo shtuff from around the internet, all about BIOPOLITICS!
My botty best at summarizing from Wikipedia: the term was coined by Rudolf Kjellén in his 1905 two-volume work The Great Powers . he sought to study “the civil war between social groups” (comprising the use of the term is mostly divided between a poststructuralist group and a political science group . the term was coined by the nazis to refer to their racial policy and nation-state concept . the book has some novel points particularly on the subject of natural selection and politics . previous notions of the concept can actually be traced back to the Middle Ages . in the works of Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, anti biopolitics is a conceptual and operative framework for societal development . this concept uses bios as a term referring to all forms of life on our planet . the politics of bioregionalism: the study of the relationship between biology and political behavior . the object of investigation is primarily political behavior, says john sutter . political behavior is caused by objectively demonstrable biological factors, merantilism and capitalist modes of production led to a modern biopolitical approach to famine . the modern state depended on providing a diet sufficient to keep the biological machines of industrial capitalism running . the fin-de-siecle revolution in microbiology and specific developments in public health legislation aided the French . the goal was for african subjects to respond in exactly the same way as metropolitan citizens to market incentives and new technologies biopolitics is a control apparatus exerted over a population as a whole . Foucault first mentioned the concept of biopolitical control in 1976 . he gave numerous examples when he first mentioned foucault contrasts social control with political power in the middle ages . he argues death was held (and/or withheld) from certain populations . vaccines and medicines dealing with public hygiene allowed death to be This was the introduction of “more subtle, more rational mechanisms: insurance, individual and collective savings, safety measures, and so on.” (2011). Apparatus, Capture, Trace: Photography and Biopolitics in: Fillip In: Surveillance & Society (volume 13, number 2; pages 153-167).