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The Use of Hope: Biopolitics of Security During the Obama Presidency

Abstract
Through a compilation of four research articles, this PhD thesis investigates ‘hope’ as a biopolitical technology. It interrogates the use of hope by the United States security apparatus, on the one hand, to pre-empt processes of radicalisation and, on the other hand, to prepare the subject of security to cope with permanent insecurity. The dissertation analyses the security discourse of the Obama Administrations 2009 – 2016, paying particular attention to strategic narratives of hope across three principal domains of US security: diplomacy, development and military. The thesis thereby renders visible the ambiguous relations between hope and insecurity in US foreign policy during the Obama period: between hate and hope in the domain of (public) diplomacy; between despair and hope in the domain of development; and between fear and hope in the military domain. To analyse the respective strategic narratives, the thesis employs a theoretical framework drawn from Giorgio Agamben’s theory of biopolitics. Through Agamben’s theoretical perspective, hope appears as a means of governing the future, a technology employed to regulate processes of subjectification. The dissertation’s theoretical ambition is to question a central assumption undergirding important critique of the post-9/11 biopolitical condition: namely that practices of security are inherently at odds with hope, operating through discourses and practices of fear and suffering to reduce the capacity to hope within the global populace. By analysing the appropriation of hope by US security discourse, the thesis explores how practices of security works through hope to achieve security. US security discourse achieves this by means of constituting a particular form of hopeful life: an individualised and resilient form of neoliberal life who is called to embody an indistinction between fear, despair, hate and hope.
Parts of work
Wrangel, Claes (2013) “Reading the War on Terror through Fear and Hope: Affective Warfare and the Question of the Future”, Political Perspectives 7(2): 85-105.
 
Tängh Wrangel, Claes (forthcoming) “The Unknowing Subject of Radicalisation: US Counterterrorism Communications and the Biopolitics of Hope”
 
Tängh Wrangel, Claes (2017) “Recognising Hope: US Global Development Discourse and the Promise of Despair”, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 35(5): 875-892. DOI: 10.1177/0263775817695814
 
Wrangel, Claes (2014) “Hope in a Time of Catastrophe? Resilience and the Future in Bare Life”, Resilience: International Policies, Practices and Discourses 2(3): 183-194. DOI: 10.1080/21693293.2014.948326
 
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
School of Global Studies, Peace and Development Research ; Institutionen för globala studier, freds- och utvecklingsforskning
Disputation
Fredagen den 16 februari 2018, kl 13.15, sal 302, Annedalseminariet, Campus Linné, Seminariegatan 1A, Göteborg.
Date of defence
2018-02-16
E-mail
claes.wrangel@globalstudies.gu.se
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/54706
Collections
  • Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för globala studier
  • Doctoral Theses from University of Gothenburg / Doktorsavhandlingar från Göteborgs universitet
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Introductory chapter/kappa (7.070Mb)
Abstract (139.1Kb)
Date
2018-01-25
Author
Tängh Wrangel, Claes
Keywords
hope
biopolitics
Agamben
Obama
security
development
public diplomacy
resilience
radicalisation
counterterrorism
strategic narratives
neoliberalism
discourse analysis
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-629-0412-8
Language
eng
Metadata
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