1st Edition

Problematics of Military Power Government, Discipline and the Subject of Violence

By Michael S. Drake Copyright 2002
    344 Pages
    by Routledge

    344 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book traces the relations between the organization of violence and social and political order from ancient Rome to early modern Europe. Following the work of Michel Foucault, the author studies the ways authority, obedience and forms of self-conduct were produced by the micro-techniques used to govern the bodies of violence deployed in different forms of warfare.

    Part one Ancient 1. Ancient Rome and historical sociology 2. The Roman Republic 3. The Imperial Order 4. From Pax Romana to the order of feud Part two Medieval 5. Medieval history and historical sociology 6. Encastellation 7. Three orders of violence 8. Medieval formations war-state and law-state Part three Late medieval 9. The Hundred Years' War 10. A military domain Part four Early modern 11. Two sources of military modernity Burgundy and the Swiss 12. Republic and monarchy two texts on government discipline and the subject of violence 13. The early modern army and historical sociology 14. Military reformations 15. Military and civil society 16. Reflections.

    Biography

    Michael Drake is a teaching fellow at the School of Economic and Social Studies, University of East Anglia. He was awarded his PhD in 1998, on which this book is based.

    This innovative book will be of significant interest to those studying past and present transformations of military power and their shaping of societies and international relations - Choice