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Killing Times

The Temporal Technology of the Death Penalty
  • David Wills
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2019
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About this book

Grounded in a deep ethical and political commitment to death penalty abolition, Wills’s engaging and powerfully argued book pushes beyond the confines of legal argument to show how the technology of capital punishment defines and appropriates the instant of death and reconfigures the whole of human mortality.
An engaging work by a major scholar whose work has been influential across a number of disciplines.

Author / Editor information

Wills David :

David Wills is Professor of French Studies and Comparative Literature at Brown University. His major work, on the originary technicity of the human, is developed in three books: Prosthesis (Stanford, 1995), Dorsality (Minnesota, 2008), and Inanimation (Minnesota, 2016). He has translated various works by Jacques Derrida, including the forthcoming Theory and Practice (Chicago, 2018).David Wills is Professor of French Studies and Comparative Literature at Brown University. His major work, on the originary technicity of the human, is developed in three books: Prosthesis (Stanford, 1995), Dorsality (Minnesota, 2008), and Inanimation (Minnesota, 2016). He has translated various works by Jacques Derrida, including the forthcoming Theory and Practice (Chicago, 2018).

Reviews

This book is about time. That is, Wills is concerned with “the complex temporality of the death penalty”—and his examination is very timely... The author provides suffcient historical and legal background about the death penalty to prepare readers not familiar with capital jurisprudence for his arguments about time, cruelty, and the actual practices of execution... Recommended.

Kelly Oliver, Vanderbilt University:
Killing Times shows how technologies of death have affected, or infected, the way we live. No mere academic treatise, Wills’s beautiful, forceful, and mesmerizing book will draw in readers through its confessional style and vivid storytelling.

Allan Stoekl, Pennsylvania State University:
Killing Times makes an enormous contribution to understanding the logic of capital punishment. Ranging widely over American Supreme Court jurisprudence, the history of capital punishment and the Enlightenment (the guillotine in France), the logic of suicide bombing and drone warfare, and the relation between narrative and execution, Wills always comes back to a central issue, one largely ignored by most commentators: time. This groundbreaking approach allows him to link disparate practices, laws, and customs: For the first time we see that capital punishment is not only about retribution through state-imposed death, but it is also and above all about the absolute mastery of time through the creation of a kind of negative prosthesis—technology—that impossibly supplements and completes the human by subtracting and destroying it. This is scholarship and theoretical analysis at the highest level: thorough, wide-ranging, and convincing.


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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
March 5, 2019
eBook ISBN:
9780823283514
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
288
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