%0 Journal Article %T Freedom without being: Kant¡¯s corrective as the philosophical crux of Agamben¡¯s ¡®Homo Sacer¡¯ series %A Susan D Brophy %J European Journal of Political Theory %@ 1741-2730 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/1474885116673546 %X In Giorgio Agamben¡¯s eyes, Immanuel Kant¡¯s work is the modern philosophical harbinger of the catastrophic ¡®state of exception¡¯. By focusing on the latter¡¯s ¡®author/subject corrective¡¯ (whereby the individual is both author and subject in relation to law), I make the connection between Agamben and Kant¡¯s Critique of Pure Reason more apparent. In doing so, I show how Kant¡¯s corrective instrumentalises autonomy in such a way that it compromises the validity it seeks to rationalise; it does so by separating the individual from actuality, by ostracising law from political challenge, and by conflating individual and state interests. Taken together, these three undercurrents are defining features of Agamben¡¯s ¡®Homo Sacer¡¯ series %K Kant %K Agamben %K autonomy %K state of exception %K corrective %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1474885116673546