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ID159795
Title ProperFoucault’s End of History
Other Title InformationThe Temporality of Governmentality and its End in the Anthropocene
LanguageENG
AuthorHamilton, Scott
Summary / Abstract (Note)Michel Foucault’s concept of governmentality is widely used throughout the social sciences to analyse the state, liberalism, and individual subjectivity. Surprisingly, what remains ignored are the repeated claims made by Foucault throughout his seminal Security, Territory, Population lectures (2007) that governmentality depends more fundamentally on a specific form of time, than on the state or the subject. By paying closer attention to Foucault’s comments on political temporality, this article reveals that governmentality emerged from, and depends upon, a very specific cosmological order that experiences time as indefinite: what Foucault calls our modern ‘indefinite governmentality’. This is elaborated here in three ways. First, by reviewing the transformation from a linear Christian cosmology to our modern indefinite governmentality through what Foucault calls the ‘de-governmentalization of the cosmos’. Second, by arguing that our experience of indefinite temporality was concretised by the geological discovery of ‘deep time’. Third, by engaging a contemporary geological concept that returns humanity to its lost cosmological centrality, thereby re-governing the cosmos: the Anthropocene, or the ‘human epoch’. Analysed using indefinite governmentality, Foucault’s forewarning of an ‘end of history’ is implicit in the new concept of the Anthropocene’s origins and ends. If it is the paradigm shift its proponents claim, then it threatens to end the temporality of the state, the subject, and governmentality itself.
`In' analytical NoteMillennium: Journal of International Studies Vol. 46, No.3; Jun 2018: p.371-395
Journal SourceMillennium: Journal of International Studies 2018-04 46, 3
Key WordsGovernmentality ;  Anthropocene ;  Political Temporalitygouvernementalité ;  Anthropocène ;  Tempo Politiquegubernamentalidad ;  Antropoceno ;  Temporalidad Política