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Queering the biopolitics of citizenship in the age of Obama
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Queering the biopolitics of citizenship in the age of ObamaJudy Rohrer.
作者:
Rohrer, Judy.
出版者:
Basingstoke :Palgrave Pivot :2014.
面頁冊數:
86 p.
附註:
Electronic book text.
附註:
Epublication based on: 9781137482327.
標題:
BiopoliticsUnited States.
標題:
United StatesRace relations.
電子資源:
Online journal 'available contents' page
ISBN:
1137488204 (electronic bk.) :
Queering the biopolitics of citizenship in the age of Obama
Rohrer, Judy.
Queering the biopolitics of citizenship in the age of Obama
[electronic resource] /Judy Rohrer. - 1st ed. - Basingstoke :Palgrave Pivot :2014. - 86 p.
Electronic book text.
Table of Contents Introduction PART I 1. Obama's Victory and Black Citizenship 2. Obama's Victory and Native Citizenship PART II 3. Prop 8 and Lesbian and Gay Citizenship 4. Prop 8 and Future Citizenship Conclusion Bibliography.
Document
The book from the interdisciplinary fields of queer theory, critical race theory, feminist political theory, disability studies, and indigenous studies to demonstrate that analyzing contemporary notions of citizenship requires understanding the machinations of governmentality and biopolitics in the (re)production of the proper citizen.Where dominant citizenship narratives have heretofore focused on either the state or the nation as qualifiers of belonging, this book draws from the interdisciplinary fields of queer theory, critical race theory, feminist political theory, disability studies, and indigenous studies to further an evolving discussion of what it means to be an American citizen in the Obama era. Rohrer demonstrates that this discussion requires an understanding of the machinations of governmentality and biopolitics in the (re)production of the (proper) citizen.
PDF.
Judy Rohrer has a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Hawai'i and is the Director of the Institute for Citizenship and Social Responsibility at Western Kentucky University. Her first book, Haoles in Hawai'i (2010) has been popular in American Studies, Ethnic Studies, Anthropology, and Hawai'i Politics courses.
ISBN: 1137488204 (electronic bk.) :£30.00Subjects--Topical Terms:
690900
Biopolitics
--United States.Subjects--Geographical Terms:
688973
United States
--Race relations.
LC Class. No.: JK1759 / .R84 2014
Dewey Class. No.: 323.60973
Queering the biopolitics of citizenship in the age of Obama
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The book from the interdisciplinary fields of queer theory, critical race theory, feminist political theory, disability studies, and indigenous studies to demonstrate that analyzing contemporary notions of citizenship requires understanding the machinations of governmentality and biopolitics in the (re)production of the proper citizen.
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Where dominant citizenship narratives have heretofore focused on either the state or the nation as qualifiers of belonging, this book draws from the interdisciplinary fields of queer theory, critical race theory, feminist political theory, disability studies, and indigenous studies to further an evolving discussion of what it means to be an American citizen in the Obama era. Rohrer demonstrates that this discussion requires an understanding of the machinations of governmentality and biopolitics in the (re)production of the (proper) citizen.
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Pairing seemingly disparate events-Barack Obama's presidential election and California's gay marriage ban-Rohrer explores troubled and troubling histories of U.S. exceptionalism, civil rights discourse, reproduction, and blood logics. In the process, she challenges readers to rethink concepts of time, progress, citizenship, sovereignty, justice, and imagined futures. Drawing on Indigenous, queer, critical race, feminist, and disability studies, this timely resource deftly critiques ableism, heterosexism, racism, and the politics of governmentality. Highly recommended. - Susan Burch, Associate Professor of American Studies, Middlebury College, USA This is an exemplary interdisciplinary text that cautions many political movements against being seduced by the promise of recognition as full citizens if we only act 'normal.' Rohrer demonstrates how moves towards normalcy reify white, heteronormative, settler colonial, and ableist ideals about progress. Through critical readings of gay marriage campaigns and narratives about Obama's presidency as the culmination of civil rights, this book provokes us to imagine, relationally, much more than inclusion within the nation. - Maile Arvin, Ph.D., University of California President's Postdoctoral Fellow in Ethnic Studies, UC Riverside, USA Judy Rohrer weaves together a fascinating set of ideas and events: the election of Barack Obama; the Proposition 8 struggle in California; the colonization of Hawai'i; the politics of disabilities. She pulls all this together through Foucault's analysis of biopower and her own trenchant rethinking of citizenship. Rohrer helps us to imagine ways of doing our citizenship that refuse the expectations of authorities while thinking critically about how we want to live with one another. - Kathy E. Ferguson, Professor of Political Science and Women's Studies, University of Hawai'i, USA.
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