Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Roberto Esposito

    January 1, 1950

    Roberto Esposito is a prominent Italian philosopher whose work delves into theoretical philosophy and political theory. His extensive academic contributions include key roles in leading Italian and international institutions, shaping discourse in his fields. Esposito engages with complex questions of political thought, contributing to the development of these disciplines through his editorial and publishing endeavors. His influence is evident in his efforts to define and understand political and legal lexicons and his role as a philosophy consultant for significant publishing houses.

    Institution und Biopolitik
    Immunitas
    Common Immunity
    Instituting Thought
    Institution
    • The pandemic has brought into sharp relief the fundamental relationship between institution and human life: at the very moment when the virus was threatening to destroy life, human beings called upon institutions - on governments, on health systems, on new norms of behavior - to combat the virus and preserve life. Drawing on this and other examples, Roberto Esposito argues that institutions and human life are not opposed to one another but rather two sides of a single figure that, together, delineate the vital character of institutions and the instituting power of life. What else is life, after all, if not a continuous institution, a capacity for self-regeneration along new and unexplored paths? No human life is reducible to pure survival, to "bare life." There is always a point at which life reaches out beyond primary needs, entering into the realm of desires and choices, passions and projects, and at that point human life becomes instituted: it becomes part of the web of relations that constitute social, political, and cultural life.

      Institution
    • This new book by the Italian philosopher Roberto Esposito addresses the profound crisis of contemporary politics and examines some of the philosophical approaches that have been used to try to understand and go beyond this crisis. Two approaches have been particularly influential – one indebted to the thought of Martin Heidegger, the other indebted to Gilles Deleuze. While opposed in their political thrust and orientation, both approaches remain trapped within the political ontology that has framed our conceptual language for some time. In order to move beyond this political ontology, Esposito turns to a third approach that he characterizes as ‘instituting thought’. Indebted to the work of the French political philosopher Claude Lefort, this third approach recognizes that the road to reconstructing a productive relation between ontology and politics, one that is both realistic and innovative, lies in instituting praxis. Building on this insight, Esposito conceptualizes social being as neither univocal nor plurivocal but as cross-cut by the dual semantics of political conflict. This new book by one of the most original European philosophers writing today will be of great interest to students and scholars in philosophy, social and political theory and the humanities generally.

      Instituting Thought
    • In Zeiten von Pandemie und Klimawandel, da die Weltbevölkerung von volatilen ­Nationalregierungen und transnationalen Konzernen nur auf sehr unzuverlässige Weise repräsentiert und geschützt wird, müsste Institutionen eigentlich eine bedeutende ­Rolle zukommen. Zu allem Überfluss aber scheint alles ­Institutionelle an seinen eigenen, schon lange diagnostizierten Unzulänglichkeiten zu laborieren und eher Teil des Problems zu sein, als zur Lösung der vielfältigen Menschheitsheraus­forderungen ­beitragen zu können.In seinem neuesten Buch geht Roberto Esposito dem bedrohlich schwindenden Vertrauen in das Wesen von Institutionen auf den Grund und plädiert für eine radikale ­Revision der Auffassung, wonach scheinbar starre ­Institutionen und soziale Bewegungen in notwendigem Widerstreit zueinander stünden. Vielmehr gilt es, das Verhältnis von Leben und Politik gänzlich neu zu denken und mit einem affirmativen Blick auf die Kraft des Instituierens die daraus neu erwachsenden Handlungsmöglichkeiten zu erschließen.

      Institution und Biopolitik