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Necropolitics - Warwick

Mbemb , Libby MeintjesPublic Culture, Volume 15, Number 1, Winter 2003, pp. 11-40 (Article)Published by Duke University PressFor additional information about this articleAccess provided by University of Warwick (20 Feb 2017 11:14 GMT) MbembeTranslated by Libby MeintjesWa syo lukasa pebweUmwime wa pita[He left his footprint on the stoneHe himself passed on]Lamba proverb, ZambiaThis essay assumes that the ultimate expression of sovereignty resides, to alarge degree, in the power and the capacity to dictate who may live and whomust , to kill or to allow to live constitute the limits of sovereignty, itsPublic Culture15(1): 11 40 Copyright 2003 by Duke University PressThis essay is the result of sustained conversations with Arjun Appadurai, Carol Breckenridge, andFran oise Verg s.

frontation with death that he or she is cast into the incessant movement of history. Becoming subject therefore supposes upholding the work of death. To uphold the work of death is precisely how Hegel defines the life of the Spirit. The life of the Spirit, he says, is not that life which is frightened of death, and spares itself

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