Empire (86 page)

Read Empire Online

Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri

Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government

353; negated by modern sovereignty,

222–225, 449n3

I N D E X

477

Palestinians, 109

reproduction, social, 28, 64, 85,

parasitical nature ofEmpire, 359–361

273–274, 385, 465n17.
See also

Pascal, Blaise, 79–80

biopower

peace, 19, 75, 83, 94, 181, 189; as

republicanism, 184, 208–218

virtue ofEmpire, 10–11, 14, 60,

res gestae,
47–48, 52, 61, 63, 368–369

167, 353

rhizome, 299, 397

people, the, 102–105, 194–195,

Rhodes, Cecil, 228, 232

311–314, 316; decline of, 344, 411

right and law, 17; international, 4,

Persian GulfWar, 12, 13, 180, 309

9–10, 14, 33, 38; supranational,

philosophy, 48–49

9–10, 16, 17; imperial, 21, 62

Pico della Mirandola, Giovanni, 72

rights.
See
multitude, rights of

place-based movements, 44

Roman Empire, 10, 20–21, 163, 166,

Pocock, J. G. A., 162

298, 314–315, 371–373

police, 12, 17–18, 20, 26, 87; and

Roman Republic, 162–163

imperial intervention, 37–39, 189

Roosevelt, Franklin Delano, 242, 348

political theory, 63, 388

Roosevelt, Theodore, 174–175, 177,

Polybius, 163, 166, 314–316, 371

242

posse,
407–411

Rosenzweig, Franz, 377

postcolonialist theories, 137–139,

Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, 85, 87, 303

143–146

royal prerogatives ofsovereignty,

post-Fordism, 55, 409–410

38–39, 343, 360

posthuman, 215

postmodernist theories, 137–143

Said, Edward, 125, 146

postmodernity, 64–65, 187, 237

Sartre, Jean-Paul, 129–131

postmodernization, 272, 280–282,

Schmitt, Carl, 16, 377–378, 463n6

285–289

Schopenhauer, Arthur, 81–82

poverty, 156–159

secularism, 71–73, 91, 161

Prakash, Gyan, 146

segmentations, social, 336–339

primitive accumulation, 94, 96,

service economies, 286–287, 293

256–259, 300, 326

Sieyès, Emmanuel-Joseph, 101, 104,

progressivism, 174–176

113

proletariat, 49–50, 63, 256–257, 402;

singularity, 57, 61, 73, 78, 87, 103,

defined, 52–53

395–396, 408.
See also
event

property, private and public, 300–303,

slavery, 120–124, 212; in the United

410

States, 170–172, 177

Smith, Adam, 86–87

racism: modern, 103, 191–195;

smooth space, 190, 327, 330

imperial, 190–195

socialist discipine, 214

Rahman, Fazlur, 148–149

social wage, 403

Rawls, John, 13, 15

society ofcontrol, 23–27, 198,

reappropriation, 404–407, 411

318–319, 329–332

reciprocity, 131–132

sovereignty: modern, 69–70, 83–90;

refusal, 203–204, 208–209

national, 95–105; in conflict with

Reich, Robert, 150–151, 291–292

capital, 325–328

Renaissance humanism, 70–74, 76, 91,

Soviet Revolution, 123, 133, 176–177,

115, 140, 162, 164, 356

240–241

representation, 84–85, 104–105, 125,

Soviet Union, collapse of, 179, 214,

134

276–279

478

I N D E X

spectacle, 321–323, 347

Tocqueville, Alexis de, 163, 168–169,

Spinoza, Baruch, 65–66, 91–92,

375

185–186, 204, 359; on immanence,

totalitarianism, 112–113, 278

73, 77–78

transcendental apparatus, 78–85,

Stalin, Joseph, 112

164–165; as the state, 325–329

state: patrimonial and absolutist, 93–95;

translation, 50–51, 57

modern, 90, 134; capitalist; 232–233,

Truman, Harry S., 249

235–237, 242, 304–309.
See also

truth, 155–156

transcendental apparatus

strikes: France, 54–56; South Korea,

ultra-imperialism, 230–231

54–56

underdevelopment theories, 283–284

structuralism, 28

United Nations, 4–6, 8, 18, 31, 40,

subaltern nationalism, 105–109,

132, 181, 309

132–134, 335–336

U.S. constitutional history, phases of,

subjectivity, production of, 32, 52,

167–168

195–197, 321, 331, 378; new circuits

variable capital, 294, 405

of, 269, 275, 402

Versailles Conference, 241

subsumption, formal and real, 25,

Vico, Giambattista, 100

255–256, 271–272, 317, 364, 386

Vietnam War, 178–179, 260, 275

superstition, 323

Virgil, 167

superstructure, 27, 30, 385–386

virtual, 357–360, 366

surplus value, realization of, 222–224

Vogelfrei,
157–158

tactics and strategy, 58–59, 63

Wallerstein, Immanuel, 334

Taylorism, 240, 242, 247–248,

Weber, Max, 41, 88–90, 340, 377

255–256, 267–268, 383, 409

welfare state, 301

teleology, 51–52, 100, 165, 383;

William ofOccam, 73

materialist, 63–66, 368, 395–396,

Wilson, Woodrow, 174–176, 180, 242

403–407, 470n25

Wittgenstein, Ludwig, 378–379

temporality, 401–403

working class, industrial, 53, 256, 402

Thatcher, Margaret, 348

world market, 150–154, 190, 235–237,

Third Worldism, 264

251–256, 310, 332–335; construction

Third World versus First World, xiii,

of, 221–222, 346.
See also
delinking

253–254, 263–264, 333–335,

World War I, 233

362–363

World War II, 243

Thucydides, 182

Tiananmen Square events, 54, 56

Zavattini, Cesare, 158

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