The Highest Poverty

The Highest Poverty Monastic Rules and Form-of-Life - Meridian : Crossing Aesthetics

Paperback (01 May 2013)

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Publisher's Synopsis

What is a rule, if it appears to become confused with life? And what is a human life, if, in every one of its gestures, of its words, and of its silences, it cannot be distinguished from the rule?

It is to these questions that Agamben's new book turns by means of an impassioned reading of the fascinating and massive phenomenon of Western monasticism from Pachomius to St. Francis. The book reconstructs in detail the life of the monks with their obsessive attention to temporal articulation and to the Rule, to ascetic techniques and to liturgy. But Agamben's thesis is that the true novelty of monasticism lies not in the confusion between life and norm, but in the discovery of a new dimension, in which "life" as such, perhaps for the first time, is affirmed in its autonomy, and in which the claim of the "highest poverty" and "use" challenges the law in ways that we must still grapple with today.

How can we think a form-of-life, that is, a human life released from the grip of law, and a use of bodies and of the world that never becomes an appropriation? How can we think life as something not subject to ownership but only for common use?

Book information

ISBN: 9780804784061
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 255
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: xiii, 157
Weight: 234g
Height: 141mm
Width: 216mm
Spine width: 11mm