A blue coat: The addict and the unspeakable girl in South Africa’s colonial archive

Thesis Eleven 180 (1):37-55 (2024)
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Abstract

Can a colonial archive render up form-of-life? To what ends? This essay explores these questions through a methodological exercise that casts a specific historical subject in the role of Giorgio Agamben’s ‘unspeakable girl’. The subject is a woman identified in a 1910 Cape Town police report as a habitual opium smoker. The unspeakable girl is a philosophical construction through which Agamben develops a concept of initiated (or initiating) knowledge. At stake in my forensic re/deconstruction of this case is how a concept of the ‘unspeakable’ may help to unsettle the figure of the ‘addict’ as a stigmatised object of knowledge and paternalism, in service of more humane policy and treatment regimes in the present. The transformative potential of initiating knowledge supports current practice as the ‘come as you are’ motto of harm reduction, and as a bridge between academic analysis and the more intimate concerns of the heart.

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References found in this work

Initiating Life: Agamben and the Political Use of Intimacy.Erik Bordeleau - 2017 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 31 (3):481-492.
Image and Silence.Giorgio Agamben & Leland de la Durantaye - 2012 - Diacritics 40 (2):94-98.
Philosophy Interrupted.Anthony Curtis Adler - 2020 - Angelaki 25 (5):19-34.
Agamben and the Critique of Katechontic Time 141 Nicholas Heron.Sergei Prozorov - 2016 - In Daniel McLoughlin (ed.), Agamben and Radical Politics. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 165-188.

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