Joseph Pugliese is Professor of Cultural Studies at Macquarie University and author of, most recently, State Violence and the Execution of Law: Biopolitical Caesurae of Torture, Black Sites, Drones.
Joseph Pugliese's reconfiguration of biopolitics does not simply take the politics of populations and life and extend its range to include the more than human; the very threshold between the human and 'other' lifeforms falls away. What is revealed is a new political-legal ethics entirely: not a question of how 'we' humans grant rights to others, but of how the more-than-human offers itself as an imperative to rethink the anthropocentrism of European law. Exploring indigenous and non-Western cosmologies provides a way to think about life, value, and politics that does not rely on the dignity of the human and its concomitant violence for all that is other than human. It's rare to read a book that combines such theoretical dexterity with fascinating empirical analysis of some of our most pressing ethical issues. -- Claire Colebrook, author of * Death of the PostHuman: Essays on Extinction * A mesmerizing exploration of the more-than-human dimensions of later modern war that is never less than deeply human. Linguistically inventive, analytically sobering-you keep wondering why it has taken us so long to see like this-Joseph Pugliese's vision of forensic ecology initiates an arrestingly novel critique of military violence. At once profoundly political and deeply ethical, this is a magnificently vital achievement. -- Derek Gregory, Peter Wall Distinguished Professor and Professor of Geography, University of British Columbia