Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:859Hits:19879052Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Article   Article
 

ID139495
Title ProperKatechontic sovereignty
Other Title Informationsecurity politics and the overcoming of time
LanguageENG
AuthorDebrix , Francois
Summary / Abstract (Note)At its core, security is obsessed with the survival of the sovereign order. Security tends to see the sovereign's existence as threatened by agents whose purpose is to challenge the life of the sovereign. In this article, I mobilize a theological language about the relationship between sovereignty and security to grasp the place that the question of life versus death, the fact of sovereign violence, and the problem of temporality occupy in past and present modalities of security. The notion of sovereign restraint, captured by the theological concept of katechon, is introduced to suggest that the politics of security is dependent upon a fundamentally violent, uncompromising, and often terrorizing objective: to keep at bay forces of temporal finitude seen as disorder or chaos. Forces of temporal finitude that refuse to abide by the belief in the sovereign's infinity can be described as the eschaton or as agents of eschatological time. Katechontic sovereignty, the sovereign practice intent on holding off finite ends (and on casting away agents of eschatological “terror”), is generative of security operations that involve decisions over life and death, matters of biopolitics versus necropolitics, and encounters between the ontological vulnerability of the sovereign and “terrorizing” agents.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Political Sociology Vol. 9, No.2; Jun 2015: p.143-157
Journal SourceInternational Political Sociology 2015-06 9, 2
Key WordsSovereign Power ;  Security Politics ;  Katechontic Sovereignty ;  Overcoming of Time ;  Sovereign Order ;  Sovereign Violence