Necrosociety, Mortispolitics, and Miquiztli-politics
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:31st Dec '25
£155.00
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Necrosociety, Mortispolitics, and Miquiztli-politics challenges the underlying assumptions of necropolitics and biopolitics, exploring core concepts such as neoliberalism, neonationalism, and decoloniality, and proposing a new framework that expands our comprehension of these two domains.
The book opens by discussing the existing conceptual debates around how we can best conceptualize the political interplay of life and death. It then moves on to explore necrosociety, mortispolitics, and Miquiztli-politics, three concepts put forward as alternative concepts in approaching the politics of life and death. The book posits that the concepts of biopolitics and necropolitics ought to be oriented within the theoretical framework of postcolonial, anticolonial, and decolonial theories. This framing clarifies the ongoing global structural differences between countries operating within a global and internal colonialism context, allowing the reader to see another side of biopolitical and necropolitical issues. "Necrosociety" attempts to articulate dimensions that biopolitics and necropolitics have not yet addressed, exploring a sociological dimension where death has extended to the point that it goes hand in hand with capitalism, producing and multiplying the social and natural-world deaths. Second, "mortispolitics" is created as an alternative category that acknowledges death. Mortispolitics builds upon the notion of death as seen in necropolitics, but instead of focusing on the state of exception, it examines the state of the law. The book uses the North–South distinction because this concept applies only to North America, specifically the United States and Mexico. It articulates a new notion of death, one based on Amerindian peoples’ ideas of sacrifice and cannibalism, arguing for a conception of death that extends beyond necropolitics.
Analyzing the interplay between life and death through a political lens, Necrosociety, Mortispolitics, and Miquiztli-politics will be of great interest to students and scholars of political philosophy, political theory, postcolonialism, and Latin American Studies.
"The book provides a concise outline of the central themes that currently move a politics of life and death in Latin America, especially in contemporary Mexico, while forwarding novel perspectives through which to open up the problematic to new possibilities."
Ronald Guy Emerson, UDLAP, Mexico
"History will remember 2025 as a year when the far-right grew and positioned itself, despite persistent civil resistance. Reading "Necrosociety, Mortispolitics, and Miquiztli-politics" is essential in comprehending the interplay between death and resistance in the coming years."
Zulia Orozco Reynosa, UABC, Mexico
"Obed Frausto’s Necrosociety, Mortispolitics, and Miquiztli-politics is an unusual accomplishment: a book highly original, theoretically rigorous, and politically relevant that reordered our mindsets regarding death, sovereignty, and freedom. In a three-panel conceptual triptych—necrosociety as critical diagnosis, mortispolitics as juridico-political apparatus, and miquiztli-politics as cosmopolitical alterative—Frausto creates a robust decolonial framework with a focus on Ibero-American legalities, Aztec epistemology, and a critique of capitalist necropolitics.
What began as a widening of necropolitics becomes a core departure: miquiztli-politics recovers death as a site of posthuman ethics, responsibility in common, and metaphysical affirmation. Frausto moves with ease across disciplines—philosophy, anthropology, legal theory, Indigenous thought—to establish a pluriversal, hermeneutic political ontology that subverts Eurocentric paradigms but envisions emancipatory possibilities connected to relationality, multiplicity, and opposition.
It speaks to political theorists, decolonial scholars, Latin American philosophers, Indigenous knowledge systems, and critical metaphysicians. Something more than that is here, though—what is here is a language with which to confront our planetary emergencies. It is a theoretical contribution but also an exhortation to reimagine the political from out of the wreckage of a dying planet."
Ariadna Estévez, UNAM, México
ISBN: 9781041001751
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 440g
138 pages