What to make of the exception? A three-stage route to Schmitt’s institutionalism
This article traces a developmental trajectory in Schmitt’s conception of law that brings out
alternative conceptualizations of the exception. “Transcendence”, “immanence” and
“integration” signify three different models to represent the relation between what I call
“nomic force” (the particular phenomenon of bringing order) and “materiality” (the matter-offactness
of a particular entity or phenomenon). I contend that while Political Theology feeds off a
transcendent model, where a sovereign decider makes materiality speakable, The Concept of the
Political shows important differences as Schmitt’s argument implies a novel conception of
materiality, much indebted to an immanent model. Finally, in the years in which Schmitt
embraces an institutional theory of law, between 1928 and 1934, he elaborated on a theory of law
pivoted on integration. The chief claim of this article is that Schmitt’s conceptualization of
exception and decision is conditional upon the relation between nomic power and materiality
that underlies his reflection in these three phases.