Perhaps few concepts have erupted with as much violence and as much insinuation capacity as that of Crowd in the political theory of our time. Crowd, or the reality and power of the "many" as opposed to the people and the nation, to their unitary and homogeneous vocation so closely linked to the different conceptions of state sovereignty. In this essay, summary of a long research program, Paolo Virno removes the debates of the seventeenth-century political philosophy between Hobbes and Spinoza, to find, in this way of being of the "many", the effective knots of political problems contemporary: life forms that have lost the security of the old universal referents, who are naked in the mobile and changing space of the permanent social mutations; a political economy that describes the displacement of exploitation devices over the most intimate of human animals, and at the same time the m...read more