INTRODUCTION

This is a book about Foucault’s children—in a number of senses. It revisits some little-discussed themes in Foucault’s work, including the children who are prominent in his Collège de France lecture series Abnormal and Psychiatric Power and who lurk, also, in his famous books on sex and discipline. These children become the base for a broader reconsideration of Foucault’s work on families, procreation, parenting, “optimal” child raising, and the projection of futures as conjoined with specific forms of responsibility—for individual life, societies, and populations.

This is also to reconsider common understandings of the role of procreation in Foucault’s best-known work, The History of Sexuality, volume 1 (or La Volonté de Savoir, The Will to Knowledge). In that work Foucault’s repudiation of a repressive hypothesis was also a repudiation of a procreative hypothesis. In other words, he rejected the assumption that nonreproductive forms of sexuality have been discouraged, or socially repressed, to the ends of family-based, heteronormative, procreative forms of sex promoted within, for example, revolutionary France, or Napoleonic France, or Victorian England, or worker-based industrial capitalism. But it would be mistaken to conclude that procreation (unlike the bodies and pleasures with which La Volonté de savoir famously concludes) lies entirely outside Foucault’s analytic focus or that Foucault denies power’s interest in procreation. The right question is: what kind of power?

The mistake occurs because of a phenomenon acknowledged by Foucault: it was easy to be distracted by his revolutionary work on sex. He commented that readers tended to ignore the last chapter of La Volonté de savoir.1 More recent reception of the work has born witness to a dramatic change in this respect. Certainly the first volume of The History of Sexuality is now widely recognized—some might say too much so2—as concerned with the emergence of biopolitics. This allows more attention to the following point: although not foregrounded in Foucault’s overt comments, the significance of children and procreation within the work has been entirely reconfigured by the time one does arrive at the book’s concluding pages.

By then, Foucault has accomplished his now celebrated refutation of the hypothesis that power works repressively to prohibit nonnormative sexualities and to promote reproductive union. He has argued that some forms of power are more effective in their capacity to stimulate and produce (for example, forms of desire, interest, identity, knowledge, hermeneutics, identity, administration), rather than discourage and suppress. Wherever this is his point, procreation and children belong differently to Foucault’s argument. They surface anew, in his depictions of biopolitical projects to optimize and administer life, in the governmental interest in “birthrate” or “healthy upbringing.” In the transition from the repressive hypothesis repudiated by Foucault to his outlining of its alternative, procreation has taken on a new interest, as a problem of trends, patterns, and conduct of and within populations, new concepts of responsibility whose impact includes biomassive futures. Let’s, temporarily, deem this phenomenon procreation’s “biopolitical hypothesis.”3

I

This reconfiguration has the potential to challenge an often-noted phenomenon in the many literatures about Foucault’s work: a strong separation between the fields engaging his work on sex (for example within sexuality studies and queer theory) and his work on biopolitics (for example, within post-Foucauldian Italian philosophy). This is a surprising prospect because neither of these fields has shown much interest in “Foucault’s children”: the role of procreation, birthrate, family spaces, reproductions, and upbringing within, for example, forms of sovereignty, biopower, discipline, governmentality, and security.

Perhaps, one might respond, we should not regret the neglect of these matters in the readings of Foucault dominating biopolitical theory and sexuality studies? There may be children in Foucault’s work, but do we lose sight of the specificity of his concerns if we show too much interest in them?

To the contrary. The beginnings of an answering case are outlined from the outset of the next chapter, as follows. According to the multiple approaches to life and death developed throughout Foucault’s work, the right question will always be: with what life are we dealing, and how do forms of subjectivity emerge in conjunction with the “conduct” of life: for example, formations of moral obligation or freedom or rights or responsibility toward collectivities, futures, or “investment” in futures. Incorporating Judith Butler’s interest in related matters of delegitimation and desubjectivation also allows a concentration on subjects variously understood to be responsible for life and death and problematized as such. Chapter 5 discusses both the legitimation and delegitimation not just of specific forms of life but also of certain forms of intertwined responsibilization: certain forms of responsibility for life.

How do we come to take for granted the types of problem and the registers (for example, moral, technical, governmental) with which life (what life?) confronts us? What are the corresponding forms of power at work? How can different formations of life be analyzed as the very emergence of those registers that come to seem intuitive: those of epistemology, knowledge, hermeneutics, truth, legality, domination, order, control, duty, police, autonomy, style, aesthetics, political legitimacy, neoliberal investment, ethics, or moral choice?

These are not new questions. But, returning to them, we’ll be reminded that the specificity of Foucault’s work is not to be found in any one particular status he attributed to sex—or indeed, to children.

Of course, reproduction has been mobilized in promotions of family values, national sentimentalities, idealized or exclusive visions of social futures, normalization, and normative exclusion. Moreover, critique of heteronormative reproductive values has been importantly joined by critique of the homonormative versions—the recentering, and “folding into life,” of forms of homosexuality associated with family values.4

But to this field of critique we can add the emphasis that reproduction, reproductive agency, and reproductive impact are not always associations with life, nor a route for its agents to be enfolded into life. The question “what kind of life” also leads to reproduction’s proximity with figures of death. Associations between reproduction, governmentalities of life, optimal life, and collective futures have (like the association of reproductive life with reproductive futurism) taken shape also as vectors of mortality. The very association of reproduction with life and futurity (for nations, populations, peoples) has amounted to its association with risk, threat, decline, the terminal.

Without minimizing their differences, we can repudiate the oppositional terms (further discussed in chapter 2) in which the interests of queer sex and procreation are sometimes distinguished: antilife versus life. Instead, the discussions of queer politics and the politics of reproduction will take place on a more interesting footing insofar as the latter is more extensively analyzed in the register foregrounded by Lee Edelman: the realm of antilife and the antisocial.

A point to be found in the margins of Edelman’s important critique of reproductive futurism is that sometimes women may find themselves ascribed, by virtue of reproductive capacity, with a sovereignlike power over human life. Consider the antiabortion campaigns financed by the Life Always group, who have mounted billboards in a number of American states likening abortion to race genocide. Rerouting the language of reproductive choice, antiabortion extremists have also represented women as making decisions about human life. Uteruses are represented as spaces of potential danger both to individual and population life. To figure maternity, and politicized birth, as principles of life and investments in the future, is to see them as potentially jeopardizing the latter. Reproduction (insofar as it is associated with mismanagement, irresponsibility, failed duty, termination, and a number of threats to life) comes to be seen as potentially impeding futures, the counterside of its promise to ensure them.

Moreover, the attribution of sovereignlike decisions about potential life tends to blur with quite different understandings of interest in life: from concern about population impact to the rerouting of antiabortionism into political pretensions of interest in womens lives, their well-being, psychic and physical health.5 The questions “what life,” “what death” help to expand an interrogation of the kinds of problem the formulation of the life decision becomes.

As discussed in chapter 4, forms of responsibility engaged by Foucault—responsibility for life and well-being (of individuals, families, futures, nations, and populations) connect to phenomena embedded in his work but discussed less by him: the attribution to women of the counterpotential for maternal harm, negative impact over life, and negative population or collective impact. Historians such as Gisela Bock, philosophers from Ladelle McWhorter to unlikely candidates such as Roberto Esposito, political theorists and sociologists including Elsa Dorlin and Dorothy Roberts, and scholarship on the complex status of reproduction in the contexts of slavery and its aftermath have addressed the deadly counterpart to the perception of women as life principle.6 When they are understood to enfold futures, both individual and the future of peoples, and to be the threshold of health, society, defense, or survival (national, ethnic, ethnic-religious, territorial, colonial, or expansionist), the multiplicity of the lives women are considered to enfold may be matched by the multiplicity of the declines and deaths for which they can be deemed responsible. We might call this procreation as the thanatopolitical hypothesis.

What kind of analysis would be adequate to this phenomenon, its bodies, spaces, duties, and temporalities; its making of reproductive futures associated with new hermeneutics, predictive futures, and explanatory pasts; the conjoining of vitalities with mortalities and their “responsibilized” subjects, collectivities, politics, and governmentalities—their biopolitics become thanatopolitics? And, particularly given the multiplication of theoretical options, why turn back to a work as familiar, even exhausted, as The History of Sexuality, and to a reconsideration of Foucault’s biopolitics, as a means of exploring this phenomenon?

II

So, why Foucault—and how? In fact, this project is also a means of giving closer attention more generally to the way in which absent concepts and problems can be given a shape in potentially transformative ways within philosophical frameworks which have omitted them. This is to elaborate a form of critique which revisits the limits frequently attributed to theorists and philosophers: that interesting gesture of wanting what can’t be supplied from a theory understood as having failed to provide it.

More so than is always recognized, that gesture generally involves a two-way direction of traffic and exerted pressure. To identify the limits of theory is, indirectly, also to negotiate with the limits of one’s interrogation. In other words, the negative capacities thereby emerging will not be limited to the object of critique, but can be understood as arising from a more productive tension between theorists and critics. Moreover, as I argue about Jacques Derrida’s critique of biopolitics in chapter 1, these encounters take place not just between the positions articulated by Foucault and critics such as Derrida but also in the relationship between their omissions, their reserves and suspensions.

I argue that such suspended reserves can be attributed to Derrida’s wariness of biopolitics—and also to Foucault’s equivalent circumnavigation of sexual difference. Foucault rarely thematized the latter, nor matters of gender. So we might assume the resources of his work would contain few answers to a question that emerges, by contrast, in the course of Derrida’s Death Penalty Seminar: why was the execution of women a special emblem for nineteenth-century abolitionists such as Victor Hugo of all that was grotesque about a death penalty?

The question is less removed from the present concerns than may first appear. What principle of life was at stake here? It was the potential procreative capacity of woman associated with a principle of life. But this is a formation—women-as-life-principle—by virtue of which, as I further discuss in the subsequent chapters, women have also been associated with the delivery of death. Moreover, it is by virtue of that association that they encounter new kinds of death penalties, some of which have manifested in the politics of abortion. It is as principle of life that some women may be associated with a corresponding capacity to effect harm on embryos, children, and futures which might be formulated in either “pseudosovereign” or biopolitical terms—or both. A number of forms of power and politics will strangely interfold in this regard, multiple languages and projects of biopolitical optimization, the intersection of pseudosovereign life decisions, seemingly sovereign legal measures, and a complex web of bureaucratic distributions of mortality adjacent to legal regimes, the management of forms of “slow death” within populations among women whose relationship to the politics of abortion often manifests as the differential social and political distribution of the perceived worth of different women’s lives (according to wealth, age, education, ability, class, immigration status, nationality, mobility, and ethnicity). The various effects can include a concurrent biopoliticization of women, their enfolding into a number of forms of politics, some of which also amount to a depoliticization of women, and underexamined, strange variants on states of exception through which women may be targeted, deconstituted, or abandoned by the law precisely by virtue of seeming to participate in “life decisions.”

The resources of Foucault, and of a number of theorists sometimes grouped as post-Foucauldian, can be reconfigured to the ends of such discussions. This contributes to a transformative period for theories of biopolitics, now increasingly reinterpreted as indirect forms of the thanatopolitical. Michel Foucault, Giorgio Agamben, Judith Butler, Lauren Berlant, Roberto Esposito, Achille Mbembe, and Jasbir Puar are among those to have emphasized that projects to govern and optimize life concurrently distribute indirect forms of death, slow death, precariousness, autoimmunity, and the necropolitical. This direction is not a return to a repressive hypothesis, for a number of reasons. Foucault distinctively argued that the formations and distributions of death, which had emerged with biopolitics, tended to emerge to the putative ends of optimizing life. Even when Mbembe rejects the view that modern distributions of death are best understood as typically subordinate to biopolitical ends, still he argues that death, human disposability, disorder, and chaos may be disseminated in some of the contagious, excitable, and proliferating modes Foucault associated with power’s capacity to stimulate and not just repress.7 And even when the category of bare life refers to the capacity to deprive those who might otherwise be rights entitled of that status, this is still a complex understanding of subtraction; as Simona Forti maintains, to dehumanize is to produce bare life.8

The following question arises: If the government of procreation has never been far from the future-oriented and risk-averse biopolitical aims of managing life and population, and given the trend in post-Foucaudian philosophy to foreground the necro- and thanatopolitical aspects of biopolitics, shouldn’t we expect to find some discussion among these theorists of how the biopolitics of reproduction also becomes necropolitical or thanatopolitical?9 In fact, this thanatopolitical version emerges through the association between reproduction, life principles, the projection of futures, and the conjoined vectors of mortality within them. This suggestion will, in the next chapter, be opened through an indirect route—by first revisiting one of the encounters between Foucault and Derrida concerning their idiosyncratic considerations of capital punishment. Both Foucault and Derrida, albeit via different means, make manifest some of the different types of life constituted before variants of death penalties. Derrida also analyzes the death penalty in terms of a general logic of progress, of “anesthetization,” and of claims to a concern for humanity and quality of life whose complex stakes were also registered by Foucault. For Derrida, it also involved problems more specific to his own work: the sovereign decision, the deconstructable instant of a death and of a decision about the moment of another’s death, a death penalty’s various aspects of spectacle, witnessing, and media technologies. But if Derrida has been brought into the discussion, this is, in part because of an insight he uniquely identifies: that the problem of the death penalty is also a problem of sexual difference.

Derrida did not, however, extend such reflections into the realm of biopolitics. By contrast, the two philosophers most associated with contemporary biopolitical theory, Agamben and Foucault, have been criticized for occluding sexual difference in their considerations, respectively, of bare life and political responsibility for life. The conjunction of these different theoretical foregroundings and occlusions leads to a number of methodological considerations to which I now turn. A potential space will emerge from within such theoretical contexts more adequate to the analysis of thanatopoliticized reproduction, even by virtue of the negative contours of inhospitality to such questions.

III

All the while that biopolitics has increasingly been reconfigured as thanatopolitical and necropolitical, that same development has been accompanied by concern that some of the prominent theorists of the latter have given inadequate consideration to matters of gender, reproduction, politicized maternity, and maternity as depoliticization.10 The term bare life has played a significant role in such discussions. It has been dominant in many post-Foucauldian contexts foregrounding the thanatopolitical. Yet this development has been criticized for failing to differentiate the ways in which subjects might, by virtue of a number of factors, be more or less vulnerable to becoming bare life.

Developed by Agamben, bare life is now a ubiquitous philosophical term circulating in the contemporary humanities and social sciences. It refers to the legal and political possibility of depriving human life of its qualified status, in a production of categories of bare life whose extinction or termination may not fully count as loss of life or homicide. One could say it is also the making of forms of death such that these deaths matter less.

Bare life has also become a widely engaged reference point for many contemporary analyses of the ways in which subordination produces, by virtue of sedimented social and historical forces, certain groups of lives deemed to matter less or deemed not worth living. For an account of the circumstances under which some lives are more vulnerable than others to becoming bare life, particularly because of the long-standing hierarchies of race, gender, caste, and colonialist subordination, one might turn, for example, to Judith Butler’s Frames of War, Achille Mbembe’s Critique de la raison negre, Veena Das’s Life and Words, or Alex Weheliye’s Habeas Viscus. Collectively, such work speaks to the need for genealogies of how colonialism, plantation, slavery, gendered, nationalist, and heterosexual matrices produce the differential vulnerability of certain bodies and subjects.

Butler, Mbembe, Das, and Weheliye all engage critically with Agamben, but they foreground differentials that cannot be expressed by Agamben’s more general ontological argument that there is a fundamental and abstract relationship between qualified political life and its possible subtraction. In short, the relationship between deprivation of legal and political status and the historical trajectory of race and gender hierarchies is widely considered—by Agamben’s critics among others—to call for different frames of analysis: variously those of genealogy or social ontology, or critical social theory or approaches reoriented toward the ontic, or to the everyday life of violence. Such analyses have been developed through different terminologies, discussed in the following chapters, including precariousness, disposability, and the terrorist assemblage.

Yet it is interesting that some of these terminologies have also been elaborated through a degree of continued conversation with the concept of bare life. And, all the while that a decontextualized version of the latter has moved into wide circulation, Agamben’s work has been intermittently characterized by interlocutors in terms of what it does not articulate. That said, if we change the perspective so as to prioritize scholarship on Agamben, the criticism that he fails to attend to the social and historical differentials of race, gender, and genealogy will in turn seem a failure to appreciate his own analytic parameters. This is, in other words, a dialogue habitually organized around the language of failure—on both sides. To interpret primarily in terms of failure is to overlook what is most interesting about this phenomenon: the capacity of the negative contours corresponding to an absent problem to emerge within the work in question.

One might think here of the gesture with which José Muñoz included Theodor Adorno, Ernst Bloch, Giorgio Agamben, and Jean-Luc Nancy among less predictable resources to which he appealed in order to create “new thought images for queer critique, different paths to queerness.”11 If the latter could also be opened through seemingly inhospitable means, distanced from Muñoz’s concerns, these might be forms of “failure worth knowing, a potential that faltered.”12 There is more to be said about the very gesture of deeming an intellectual framework a failure with respect to an articulation it ought to be able to provide. These are failures worth knowing, but what is failure: particularly where this means assessing a theoretical language or disposition for its potential to accommodate a problem that seems implausible within it?

With respect to the ways in which the term bare life has been repeatedly pressed for what it does not deliver, my argument is that the incapacity to articulate gender difference, gender formation, formations of precariousness, and genealogies of vulnerable bodies may—by dint of reiterated attribution—convert to a strong inhabitation by what is missing. For example, an absent conceptual possibility emerges under the pressure of the critical race, gender, postcolonial, and genealogically inflected attention with which Agamben’s work has been confronted: a differential and genealogical understanding of bare life jarring with the context in which it emerges. And this is a direction which can always be reversed, as when Ranjana Khanna and Catherine Mills combine feminist critique of Agamben with renewed interest in questions of how legal and political spaces can concurrently protect and expose.13 This is also to give greater attention to the way in which concepts can emerge through a process of mutual confrontation not just between texts, arguments, theorists, and philosophers but also, and more particularly, through the relationship between their capacities and incapacities.

Accordingly, this exploration involves spending time with some unfamiliar figures and problems: Foucault’s remarks on children; some liminal suggestions made about female sinthomosexuals in Edelman’s No Future; some of Agamben’s most fleeting remarks about women, reproduction, and sexual violence, and equally brief—and wary—comments about the making of fetal life as precarious in the opening pages of Butler’s Frames of War; a pregnant woman in a Boston abortion clinic who, in a dissonant passage in Carol Gilligan’s In a Different Voice, imagines selling her child on “the black market”; Derrida’s aversion to biopolitics and his uncharacteristic inattention to both sex and sexual difference when it came to the work of Foucault.

Exploring the quality of futurity with which reproduction emerges within biopolitics—that form of politics assuming responsibility for the management and optimization of life—will take the route of a particular form of dialogue with recent philosophers and theorists who have engaged biopolitical phenomena. This is a turn to what does not lie front and center in these contexts, to what lies held in reserve, even within texts whose resources we may seem to have drained. Critical analysis might use the suspended reserves of the most unpromising theoretical resources to stimulate the emergence of new concepts—from thanatopolitized reproduction to ontological tact to hypergenealogy—whose contours of omission are traced to the ends of a different variant of the productivity of critique.