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Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power And Bare Life · Recommended

without the killer being charged with murder. Cannot be sacrificed in a religious ritual.

Giorgio Agamben's (1995) is a foundational work of contemporary political philosophy that examines how modern states control human existence. It argues that the "original activity of sovereign power" is the production of a "biopolitical body"—life that is legally included in the state only through its exclusion from protection. 1. Core Concept: The Homo Sacer Homo sacer: sovereign power and bare life

Derived from archaic Roman law, the (sacred or accursed man) is an individual who: without the killer being charged with murder

—they are outside of human law (it doesn't protect them) but still subject to sovereign power (it allows their death). 2. Key Philosophical Pillars Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life Homo sacer: sovereign power and bare life

Homo sacer: sovereign power and bare life