Life, Earth, Colony
External Review of Whole Manuscript
Friedrich Ratzel's Necropolitical Geography
Abstract
Life, Earth, Colony explores the ideas, life, and historical significance of German zoologist turned geographer Friedrich Ratzel (1844–1904), famous for developing the foundations of geopolitical thought. Ratzel produced a remarkable body of work that revolutionized the study of space, movement, colonization, and war. He also served as a source of intellectual inspiration for national socialism, particularly through his Lebensraum (living space) concept, which understood all life as being caught in an eternal struggle for space. This book closely analyzes this radical conservative intellectual, focusing on his often-overlooked ethnography, biogeography, travel, and creative writing, and colonial activism as well as his more widely-known political geography. Life, Earth, Colony finds that there is an as yet unexplored necropolitical impulse at the heart of Ratzel’s entire oeuvre, a preoccupation with death and dying, which had a profound impact on twentieth-century history.
Keywords
Friedrich Ratzel, necropolitics, death, human geography, anthropogeography, geopoolitics, war, biopolitics, German colonialism, fascism, national socialism, the far right, scientific racism, Darwinism, vitalism, monism, German empire, geographical thought, history of ideas, history of scienceDOI
10.3998/mpub.11987710ISBN
9780472903511, 9780472076178, 9780472056170, 9780472903511Publisher
University of Michigan PressPublisher website
https://www.press.umich.edu/Publication date and place
2023Imprint
University of Michigan PressSeries
Social History, Popular Culture, And Politics In Germany,Classification
History
European history
Political science and theory
Human geography