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‘I Would Prefer Not To’: Giorgio Agamben, Bartleby and the Potentiality of the Law
by
Whyte, Jessica
in
Ancient Greek Philosophy
/ Cultural Studies
/ Education
/ Employers
/ Gender Studies
/ Human Rights
/ Law
/ Legal History
/ Messianic Figures
/ Philosophy
/ Philosophy of Law
/ Sovereignty
/ Theories of Law
2009
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‘I Would Prefer Not To’: Giorgio Agamben, Bartleby and the Potentiality of the Law
by
Whyte, Jessica
in
Ancient Greek Philosophy
/ Cultural Studies
/ Education
/ Employers
/ Gender Studies
/ Human Rights
/ Law
/ Legal History
/ Messianic Figures
/ Philosophy
/ Philosophy of Law
/ Sovereignty
/ Theories of Law
2009
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Do you wish to request the book?
‘I Would Prefer Not To’: Giorgio Agamben, Bartleby and the Potentiality of the Law
by
Whyte, Jessica
in
Ancient Greek Philosophy
/ Cultural Studies
/ Education
/ Employers
/ Gender Studies
/ Human Rights
/ Law
/ Legal History
/ Messianic Figures
/ Philosophy
/ Philosophy of Law
/ Sovereignty
/ Theories of Law
2009
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‘I Would Prefer Not To’: Giorgio Agamben, Bartleby and the Potentiality of the Law
Journal Article
‘I Would Prefer Not To’: Giorgio Agamben, Bartleby and the Potentiality of the Law
2009
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Overview
In
Homo Sacer
, Giorgio Agamben suggests that Herman’s Melville’s ‘Bartleby the Scrivener’ offers the ‘strongest objection against the principle of sovereignty’. Bartleby, a legal scribe who does not write, is best known for the formula with which he responds to all his employer’s requests, ‘I would prefer not to.’ This paper examines this formula, asking what it would mean to ‘prefer not to’ when the law is in question. By reading Melville’s story alongside Aristotle’s theory of potentiality and Walter Benjamin’s theses on history, it suggests that Bartleby’s interest, for Agamben, lies in his challenge to dominant conceptions of the relation between potentiality and actuality, which, he believes, are rendered indistinct in sovereignty. By reflecting critically on Agamben’s depiction of Bartleby as a ‘new Messiah’, this paper examines Agamben’s understanding of what it would mean to
fulfil
the law, and what form of political task this would entail.
Publisher
Springer Netherlands,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
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