"This is an essential collection of essays, both because the concept of biopolitics is so crucial for understanding the twenty-first century, and because the very sense of the biopolitical is as messy and fractured as our present. Ranging across a rich terrain of problems how we might think about life in an era of climate chaos, the problem of theorys abstraction in an age that only wants life, and the problem of life in a political milieu where so many lives do not matter these essays mark out a series of lucid and original paths for the future. This is a coherent and diverse collection of essays that will be of value to anyone working in the humanities and social sciences." Claire Colebrook, Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of English, Penn State University, USA
"Di Leo and Hitchcocks Biotheory proves that theory and critique are not only alive and well but also kicking. Not afraid of taking on debates and tensions on and between established theorists of biopolitics, nor of testing these against problems and theories that have emerged more recently, they and their contributors speak also to the vibrant field of inquiries "beyond" biopolitics." Frida Beckman, Professor of Comparative Literature, Stockholm University, Sweden
"In Biotheory: Life and Death Under Capitalism, Di Leo and Hitchcock have assembled a striking collection of readings whose clear intent is to disrupt a number of the principle assumptions many of us have been working under for years when reflecting on biopolitics. Biotheory asks us to push beyond our previous understanding of biopolitics and to let go of certainty around words like life, sovereignty, and politics. This is by no means easy, but the volume, framed by a wonderfully trenchant introduction, provides a road map for thinking biopolitics anew, creatively and radically." Timothy C. Campbell, Professor of Italian Studies, Cornell University, USA