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Joseph Pugliese

    Joseph Pugliese, professore di Studi Culturali, approfondisce le complesse intersezioni tra potere statale e violenza. Il suo lavoro accademico esamina criticamente come la legge viene attuata attraverso misure estreme, esplorando temi come la tortura e l'esecuzione remota della giustizia tramite tecnologia dei droni. La scrittura di Pugliese offre un'analisi profonda della violenza istituzionalizzata e delle sue implicazioni etiche. La sua ricerca spinge i lettori a confrontarsi con le difficili questioni riguardanti il potere statale, i diritti umani e la definizione stessa di giustizia nella società contemporanea.

    More-Than-Human Diasporas
    Biopolitics of the More-Than-Human
    • 2024

      More-Than-Human Diasporas

      Topologies of Empire, Settler Colonialism, Slavery

      • 288pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      Exploring the concept of more-than-human diasporas, this book examines how non-human entities like water, trees, clay, and architectural styles contribute to cultural and environmental narratives. By breaking traditional scholarly boundaries, it offers a fresh perspective on the interconnectedness of human and non-human experiences in diaspora, highlighting the significance of these entities in shaping identities and communities.

      More-Than-Human Diasporas
    • 2020

      Biopolitics of the More-Than-Human

      Forensic Ecologies of Violence

      • 310pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      By exploring the biopolitical concept through a nonanthropocentric perspective, Joseph Pugliese argues for the recognition of more-than-human entities as legitimate actors deserving of justice. He highlights the entanglement of these entities with human victims in conflict zones like Palestine and sites of US drone strikes, challenging human exceptionalism. Drawing on Indigenous epistemologies, Pugliese advocates for an ethico-legal framework that acknowledges ecological justice, revealing the often-overlooked impacts of human conflict on the more-than-human world.

      Biopolitics of the More-Than-Human