Biopower of Blood: From Immunity to Self-Referentiality and Self-Actualization Cover Image

Biopower of Blood: From Immunity to Self-Referentiality and Self-Actualization
Biopower of Blood: From Immunity to Self-Referentiality and Self-Actualization

Author(s): A. Kiarina Kordela
Subject(s): Political Philosophy, Structuralism and Post-Structuralism, Marxism
Published by: Lietuvos kultūros tyrimų
Keywords: Spinoza; Marx; Balibar; Foucault; Esposito;

Summary/Abstract: Through dialogue with Roberto Esposito’s work, I reconceptualize modernity as a historically specific modulation of the transhistorical biopolitical prohibition of incest, that is, the prohibition of (the) self-referentiality (of blood). This specific modulation defining capitalist modernity involves a transition from aristocratic “sanguinity”– where power legitimizes itself on the basis of its past actualized creative power of blood (ancestry) – to bourgeois “sexuality”– whereby power asserts itself on the basis of its future potential of self-actualization (progeny) (Foucault / Spinoza). The modern double prohibition of selfreferentiality and self-actualization extends from progeny to the products of any form of labor, as the power to actualize itself (Marx). Further, self-actualization means that each individual (human or not) is produced through affecting and being affected by all other individuals (Deleuze) – in short, each individual is transindividual (Balibar). I conclude by addressing the effects of today’s pandemic on transindividuality.

  • Issue Year: 2022
  • Issue No: 17
  • Page Range: 93-107
  • Page Count: 15
  • Language: English