
Blood Work The Leper in the City (w/ Serene Richards)
Nov 4, 2025
Serene Richards, a law lecturer at NYU London and author of Biopolitics as a System of Thought, offers a concise scholarly take on Agamben. She unpacks Homo Sacer and the State of Exception. She explores how biopolitical logic shapes citizenship, refugees, and modern policing. She also introduces Smart Being and how techno‑capitalism quantifies life and hides labor.
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Biopolitics As Governance Of Life
- Agamben treats biopolitics as the governance of life that rests on a violent appropriation of bare life.
- This framework shows liberal democracies require exclusionary violence to constitute political life.
Ancient Roots Of Modern Biopolitics
- Agamben traces biopolitics back to Aristotle's Zoe/Bios distinction, not just modern state theory.
- Political inclusion depends on predicates that simultaneously produce excluded lives used as the political ground.
Hidden Labor Behind Tech Wealth
- Serene links modern supply chains and exploited refugee labor to ancient structures that hide foundational violence.
- She names low-paid refugee work as an invisible basis for technologies enjoyed by privileged consumers.





