![<strong>Hunger Strike</strong>](https://politicaltheology.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/17630637142_3f7e2ce706_o-600x450.jpg)
“Instead of neatly separating the forms of resistance to biosovereignty into life-affirming struggles and necroresistance and mapping them (and life and death) onto the reform/revolt dichotomy, I suggest that we conceive life and death as relational rather than oppositional categories. For every differentiation and intensification of death creates new possibilities of life; and every differentiation and intensification of life entails experiences of “death” that cannot be reduced to the power of one’s death.”
By Özge Serin