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  • MPI Ethno. Forsch.  (15)
  • 2020-2024  (15)
  • Durham : Duke University Press  (15)
  • USA  (15)
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  • 1
    ISBN: 9781478093565
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xi, 186 pages) , illustrations
    Additional Information: Rezensiert in Moreira de Andrade, Thaís [Rezension von: Castañeda, Michelle, 1987-, Disappearing rooms] 2024
    Series Statement: Dissident acts
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Castañeda, Michelle, 1987 - Disappearing rooms
    Keywords: Emigration and immigration law ; Hispanic Americans Legal status, laws, etc ; Discrimination in justice administration ; Performative (Philosophy) ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / American / Hispanic American Studies ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General ; USA ; Einwanderung ; Zuwanderungsrecht ; Abschiebungshaft ; Kriminalisierung ; Rassismus
    Abstract: In Disappearing Rooms Michelle Castañeda lays bare the criminalization of race enacted every day in US immigration courts and detention centers. She uses a performance studies perspective to show how the theatrical concept of mise-en-scène offers new insights about immigration law and the absurdist dynamics of carceral space. Castañeda draws upon her experiences in immigration trials as an interpreter and courtroom companion to analyze the scenography - lighting, staging, framing, gesture, speech, and choreography - of specific rooms within the immigration enforcement system. Castañeda’s ethnographies of proceedings in a “removal” office in New York City, a detention center courtroom in Texas, and an asylum office in the Northeast reveal the depersonalizing violence enacted in immigration law through its embodied, ritualistic, and affective components. She shows how the creative practices of detained and disappeared people living under acute duress imagine the abolition of detention and borders. Featuring original illustrations by artist-journalist Molly Crabapple, Disappearing Rooms shines a light into otherwise hidden spaces of law within the contemporary deportation regime. Duke University of Press Scholars of Color First Book Award Recipient
    Note: In English
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9781478019633 , 9781478016991
    Language: English
    Pages: xi, 186 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Additional Information: Rezensiert in Moreira de Andrade, Thaís [Rezension von: Castañeda, Michelle, 1987-, Disappearing rooms] 2024
    Series Statement: Dissident acts
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Castañeda, Michelle, 1987- Disappearing rooms
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Castañeda, Michelle, - 1987- Disappearing rooms
    Keywords: Emigration and immigration law ; Hispanic Americans Legal status, laws, etc ; Discrimination in justice administration ; Performative (Philosophy) ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / American / Hispanic American Studies ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General ; USA ; Einwanderung ; Zuwanderungsrecht ; Abschiebungshaft ; Kriminalisierung ; Rassismus
    Abstract: "In Disappearing Rooms Michelle Castañeda lays bare the criminalization of race enacted every day in U.S. immigration courts and detention centers. She uses a performance studies perspective to show how the theatrical concept of mise-en-scéne offers new insights about immigration law and the absurdist dynamics of carceral space. Castañeda draws upon her experiences in immigration trials as an interpreter and courtroom companion to analyze the scenography-lighting, staging, framing, gesture, speech, and choreography-of specific rooms within the immigration enforcement system. Castañeda's ethnographies of proceedings in a "removal" office in New York City, a detention center courtroom in Texas, and an asylum office in the Northeast reveal the depersonalizing violence enacted in immigration law through its embodied, ritualistic, and affective components. She shows how the creative practices of detained and disappeared peoples living under acute duress imagine the abolition of detention and borders. Featuring original illustrations by artist-journalist, Molly Crabapple, Disappearing Rooms shines a light into otherwise hidden spaces of law within the contemporary deportation regime. Duke University of Press Scholars of Color First Book Award Recipient"--
    Description / Table of Contents: Removal room : disappearance and the practice of accompaniment -- The prison-courtroom : no-show justice in family detention -- Bring me the room : tragic recognition and the right not to tell your story.
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (159-176) and index
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9781478007494 , 9781478006077 , 9781478006749
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Keywords: USA ; Human geography
    Abstract: Juan Herrera maps 1960s Chicano Movement activism in the Latinx neighborhood of Fruitvale in Oakland, California, showing how activists there constructed a politics forged through productions of space
    Note: English
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  • 4
    ISBN: 9781478018186 , 9781478015550
    Language: English
    Pages: xiv, 215 Seiten
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Lumba, Allan E. S., 1981- Monetary authorities
    DDC: 330.12/2v
    Keywords: 1898-1935 ; Postkolonialismus ; Kolonialismus ; Geldpolitik ; Philippinen ; USA ; Capitalism ; Decolonization ; Anti-imperialist movements ; Colonization Economic aspects 19th century ; History ; HISTORY / United States / General ; HISTORY / Asia / Southeast Asia ; Philippines History 1898- ; Philippines Politics and government 1898-1935 ; Philippines Economic conditions ; Philippines Foreign economic relations ; United States Foreign economic relations ; Philippinen ; USA ; Postkolonialismus ; Kolonialismus ; Geldpolitik ; Antiimperialismus ; Geschichte 1850-1950
    Abstract: The wealth of colonies -- Mongrel currencies -- Bad money -- An orgy of mismanagement -- Under common wealth.
    Abstract: "In Monetary Authorities Allan E. S. Lumba explores how money worked to justify racial and class hierarchies, enforce capitalist exploitation, and counter movements for decolonization in the American colonial Philippines. By tracing the archives of economic experts from the late nineteenth century through the 1930s, Lumba illuminates the colonial state's obsession with policing the economic activities of colonized subjects, who they believed could radically threaten the security of capital accumulation and U.S. imperial sovereignty. Authority over money, however, did not remain the possession of American colonizers. Filipino statesmen would attempt to gain control over colonial money, coveting both its material and meaning-making power. Lumba thus examines how struggles over the colonial monetary system would resonate with broader struggles over capitalism and decolonization in the Philippines and U.S. empire."
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 5
    ISBN: 9781478017943 , 9781478015321
    Language: English
    Pages: xv, 207 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Dissident acts
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Schaeffer, Felicity Amaya Unsettled borders
    DDC: 304.8/721
    Keywords: Border crossing Social aspects ; Border security ; Indigenous peoples Social conditions ; Traditional ecological knowledge ; Indian activists ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Indigenous Studies ; SCIENCE / Philosophy & Social Aspects ; Mexican-American Border Region Emigration and immigration ; Social aspects ; USA ; Staatsgrenze ; Mexiko ; Indianer ; Militär ; Überwachung ; Grundeigentum
    Abstract: "The story of how the U.S.-Mexico border has become more dangerous for migrant crossing has preoccupied scholars across a range of fields. As necessary as this has been, the overwhelming focus on border crossers has eclipsed the consequences of military occupation on Native tribes whose land and bodies spill across the border, including mounting numbers of Maya refugees. Unsettled Borders follows the science and technological development of border surveillance back to military innovations tasked with seeing the invisible movements of Apache and Chiricahua warriors across the rugged terrain of the western frontier. Felicity Amaya Schaeffer follows a range of militarized surveillance innovations across time and space, recalling the Spanish lookout points erected to monitor Maya in the Yucatan, the superior eyes of Indian scouts, automated border avatars, and swarming bee drones. From the perspective of Native border inhabitants, a broader story emerges about how mechanized seeing attempts to eradicate Native sacred and animate relation with land. With an eye on the more-than-human world, Apache, O'odham and Maya teach us about the impossibility of borders in their sacred scientific worldviews that see relation where westerners impose segregated seeing and knowing. Unsettled Borders returns to ancestral practices-from beekeepers caring for the Melipona bees who bring back their forests to O'odham relations with saguaro peoplehood amputated by border walls. The border comes alive with a resurgent force of Native land defenders who refuse extraction, occupation, and surveillance by the futile attempts to build virtual and iron-cast walls that will ultimately fail to contain life and erect borders around the world"--
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis: Seiten 185-200
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  • 6
    ISBN: 9781478018315 , 9781478015680
    Language: English
    Pages: 260 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Kim, Jodi, 1970- Settler garrison
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Kim, Jodi, 1970 - Settler garrison
    DDC: 325/.32
    Keywords: Militärstandort ; Kolonialismus ; Postkolonialismus ; Internationale Wirtschaftsbeziehungen ; Asiatisch-pazifischer Raum ; USA ; Military bases, American ; Debts, Public ; Imperialism ; Postcolonialism ; HISTORY / World ; POLITICAL SCIENCE / Colonialism & Post-Colonialism ; United States Territorial expansion ; United States Foreign economic relations ; Pacific Area Foreign economic relations
    Abstract: "Settler Garrison offers an analysis of how transpacific cultural productions provide an alternative, anti-militarist, and decolonial archive to U.S. militarist settler imperialism in Asia and the Pacific. Focusing on the post-World War II era, Jodi Kim theorizes militarist settler imperialism as a set of relations significantly structured and continually reproduced through temporal and spatial exceptions. Kim argues that that the temporal exception is debt imperialism, a process through which the United States rolls over its significant national debt indefinitely and does not conform to the time of repayment that it imposes on others at multiple scales. The spatial exception is the creation of juridically ambiguous spaces where sovereignties at once proliferate, compete, and cancel one another out. Focusing on three types of spatial exceptions-the military base and attendant camp town, the POW camp, and the unincorporated territory or military colony of Guam-the book argues that such spaces are remade into America's settler garrison."
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  • 7
    ISBN: 9781478022688
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (320 Seiten) , Illustrationen
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Carmody, Todd, 1979 - Work requirements
    DDC: 361.973
    Keywords: Öffentliche Sozialleistungen ; Randgruppe ; Behinderte Arbeitskräfte ; Rasse ; Arbeit ; Reputation ; Geschichte ; USA ; Public welfare History ; Welfare recipients History ; Work Social aspects ; African Americans Social conditions ; People with disabilities Social conditions ; Minorities Social conditions ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / People with Disabilities ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / American / African American & Black Studies
    Abstract: Introduction: Signs Taken for Work -- . The Pensioner's Claim -- The Beggar's Case -- The Work of the Image -- Institutional Rhythms -- Coda: Remaking Reciprocity
    Abstract: "Work Requirements reframes the history of work-based social welfare practice as a representational project tasked with shoring up the inherent meaningfulness of work, examining what Todd Carmody calls the "print culture of social welfare" to show how work became an indicator of social deservingness over the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Prior to the emergence of the formal US welfare state, textual projects-from documentary photographs to insurance claims-contributed to the idea that individuals must be engaged in work to deserve social welfare. Progressive charity reformers and advocates of Black industrial education pushed for social welfare reforms to make people with disabilities, poor people, people of color, and incarcerated people into wage-earning citizens. Carmody shows how the bootstrap narrative, Taylorist studies of labor, and nineteenth-century ideas of race and disability fed into a specific ideology about labor-particularly, that someone's willingness to work could be scientifically measured and systematically evaluated-that continues to shape US welfare policy today."
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 8
    ISBN: 9781478015703 , 9781478018346
    Language: English
    Pages: ix, 234 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Moore, Kelli, 1976 - Legal spectatorship
    DDC: 362.82/92
    Keywords: Family violence Law and legislation ; Victims of family violence Legal status, laws, etc ; Slavery Social aspects ; African Americans Social conditions 19th century ; Discrimination in justice administration History 19th century ; Photography Social aspects ; Legal photography ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / American / African American & Black Studies ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies ; USA ; Häusliche Gewalt ; Unterdrückung ; Sklaverei ; Rassismus ; Intersektionalität ; Gerichtssaal ; Visuelle Medien ; Fotografie ; Beweis
    Abstract: Authenticating domestic violence : image and feeling in abolitionist media -- Battered women in a cybernetic milieu -- Authenticating testimony in the domestic violence courtroom -- Incorporating camp in criminal justice.
    Abstract: "Legal Spectatorship examines the visual culture surrounding domestic violence, or DV, focusing on the ways that photographs are marshaled as a form of spectacular evidence rooted in slavery and antiblackness. Historically, slaves were not able to testify in person in court although they were often silent witnesses to white domestic conflicts. Today, these histories of racism are embedded into domestic violence prosecution as photographs documenting evidence of DV stand in for women's testimony, and an extensive web of surveillance and administrative tactics criminalize female victims. Kelli Moore reads the legislative, juridical, and media structures that have developed around domestic violence as an extension of the logics of slavery that points to a broader form of US "domestic violence" in the form of slavery and racism. The chapters take up slave witnessing and black subjectivity; the psychological theories that developed around DV in the context of the Civil Rights movement; "artivism" around domestic violence imagery and anti-DV campaigns; and Moore's own ethnographic work in the courtroom observing domestic violence cases"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 9
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xvi, 336 Seiten) , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Religious cultures of African and African diaspora people
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Embodying Black religions in Africa and its diasporas
    DDC: 200.896
    Keywords: Religion and culture ; Religions African influences ; African diaspora ; Religion Social aspects ; Africa Religion ; Africa Religious life and customs ; Afrika ; Neue Religion ; Islam ; USA ; Schwarze ; Religiosität ; Embodiment
    Abstract: Foreword / Jacob Olupona, Harvard University, Divinity School -- Introduction: Embodiment and relationality in religions of Africa and its diaspora / Yolanda Covington-Ward and Jeanette S. Jouili -- Spirited choreographies : embodied memories and domestic enslavement in Togolese mama tchamba rituals / Elyan Hill -- Alchemy of the fuqara : spiritual care, memory, and the Black Muslim body / Youssef Carter -- Spiritual ethnicity : our collective ancestors in Ifá devotion across the Americas / N. Fadeke Castor -- Faith full : sensuous habitus, everyday affect, and divergent diaspora in the UCKG / Rachel Cantave -- Covered bodies, moral education, and the embodiment of Islamic reform in northern Nigeria / Elisha P. Renne -- Embodied worship in a Haitian protestant church in the Bahamas : religious habitus among Bahamians of Haitian descent / Bertin M. Louis Jr. -- The quest for spiritual purpose in a secular dance community : Bèlè's rebirth in contemporary Martinique / Camee Maddox-Wingfield -- Embodying Black religion : the ethics and aesthetics of Afro-diasporic Muslim hip-hop in Britain / Jeanette S. Jouili -- Secular affective politics in a national dance about AIDS in Mozambique / Aaron Montoya -- Wrestling with homosexuality : kinesthesia as resistance in Ghanaian pentecostalism / Nathanael Homewood -- "Exceptional healing" : gender, materiality, embodiment, and prophetism in the Lower Congo / Yolanda Covington-Ward -- Dark matter : formations of death pollution in southeastern African funerals / Casey Golomski.
    Abstract: "Embodying Black Religions in African and Its Diasporas critically examines the role of the body as religiously motivated social action for people of African descent across the geographic regions of the African continent, the Caribbean and Latin America, the American South, and Europe. Tackling a variety of religious contexts, from Pentecostalism, to Ifa divination, to Islam, the contributors investigate the complex intersections between the body, religious expression, and the construction and negotiation of particular social relationships and collective identities"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 10
    Image
    Image
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9781478014034 , 9781478011897
    Language: English
    Pages: 319 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Povinelli, Elizabeth A., 1962 - The Inheritance
    DDC: 301.092
    RVK:
    Keywords: Povinelli, Elizabeth A ; Povinelli, Elizabeth A Family ; Women anthropologists Biography ; Women anthropologists Pictorial works ; Autobiographies ; Autobiografie ; Comic ; Bildband ; Autobiografie ; Comic ; Bildband ; Autobiografie ; Comic ; USA ; Oberitalien ; Anthropologin ; Genealogie
    Abstract: "The Inheritance is anthropologist Elizabeth A. Povinelli's graphic memoir in which she explores her family's history and the events, traumas, and social structures that define our individual and collective pasts and futures"--
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  • 11
    ISBN: 9781478014140 , 9781478013235
    Language: English
    Pages: xvi, 296 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme, Faksimiles , 23 cm
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Morgan, Jennifer L. Reckoning with slavery
    DDC: 306.3/62
    Keywords: Slavery Political aspects ; Slavery Economic aspects ; Women slaves ; Women slaves ; Slave trade History ; Slave trade History ; Sklaverei ; USA ; Atlantischer Raum
    Abstract: "The history of the trans-Atlantic slave trade is deeply embedded in the emergence of early modern economic and political institutions. Reckoning with Slavery resituates the early modern as the space out of which race, racial hierarchies, notions of value and trade, and ideas of gender and reproduction are mutually constituted. Through a study of numeracy, trade, counting, and commerce, the lives and experiences of enslaved women in the sixteenth and seventeenth century English Atlantic world come into focus. Rather than treating economy and culture as distinct aspects of social history, Reckoning with Slavery asks what we can come to know about kinship, family, and race through the archives of trade and commerce"--
    Abstract: Inhaltsverzeichnis: Producing numbers: reckoning with the sex ratio in the transatlantic slave trade, 1500-1700 -- "Unfit subjects of trade": demographic logics and colonial encounters -- "To their great commoditie": numeracy and the production of African difference -- Accounting for the "most excruciating torment": transatlantic passages -- "The division of the captives": commerce and kinship in the English Americas -- "Treacherous rogues": locating women in resistance and revolt.
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 257-281
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  • 12
    ISBN: 9781478010647 , 9781478011750 , 9781478013112
    Language: English
    Pages: xvi, 336 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Religious cultures of African and African diaspora people
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Covington-Ward, Yolanda Embodying Black Religions in Africa and Its Diasporas
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Embodying Black religions in Africa and its diasporas
    DDC: 200.896
    Keywords: Religion and culture ; Religions African influences ; African diaspora ; Religion Social aspects ; Africa Religion ; Africa Religious life and customs ; Afrika ; Neue Religion ; Islam ; USA ; Schwarze ; Religiosität ; Embodiment
    Abstract: Foreword / Jacob Olupona, Harvard University, Divinity School -- Introduction: Embodiment and relationality in religions of Africa and its diaspora / Yolanda Covington-Ward and Jeanette S. Jouili -- Spirited choreographies : embodied memories and domestic enslavement in Togolese mama tchamba rituals / Elyan Hill -- Alchemy of the fuqara : spiritual care, memory, and the Black Muslim body / Youssef Carter -- Spiritual ethnicity : our collective ancestors in Ifá devotion across the Americas / N. Fadeke Castor -- Faith full : sensuous habitus, everyday affect, and divergent diaspora in the UCKG / Rachel Cantave -- Covered bodies, moral education, and the embodiment of Islamic reform in northern Nigeria / Elisha P. Renne -- Embodied worship in a Haitian protestant church in the Bahamas : religious habitus among Bahamians of Haitian descent / Bertin M. Louis Jr. -- The quest for spiritual purpose in a secular dance community : Bèlè's rebirth in contemporary Martinique / Camee Maddox-Wingfield -- Embodying Black religion : the ethics and aesthetics of Afro-diasporic Muslim hip-hop in Britain / Jeanette S. Jouili -- Secular affective politics in a national dance about AIDS in Mozambique / Aaron Montoya -- Wrestling with homosexuality : kinesthesia as resistance in Ghanaian pentecostalism / Nathanael Homewood -- "Exceptional healing" : gender, materiality, embodiment, and prophetism in the Lower Congo / Yolanda Covington-Ward -- Dark matter : formations of death pollution in southeastern African funerals / Casey Golomski.
    Abstract: "Embodying Black Religions in African and Its Diasporas critically examines the role of the body as religiously motivated social action for people of African descent across the geographic regions of the African continent, the Caribbean and Latin America, the American South, and Europe. Tackling a variety of religious contexts, from Pentecostalism, to Ifa divination, to Islam, the contributors investigate the complex intersections between the body, religious expression, and the construction and negotiation of particular social relationships and collective identities"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 13
    ISBN: 9781478007326
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (241 Seiten)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Beck, John, 1963 - Technocrats of the imagination
    DDC: 700.1/050973
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Technology and the arts History 20th century ; Military-industrial complex ; Arts Experimental methods ; Art / Criticism & Theory ; Electronic books ; USA ; Medienkunst ; Militärtechnik ; Geschichte 1960-1969 ; Experiments in Art and Technology ; Laboratorium ; Militär
    Abstract: Science, Art, Democracy -- A Laboratory of Form and Movement: Institutionalizing Emancipatory Technicity at MIT -- The Hands-on Approach: Engineering Collaboration at E.A.T. -- Feedback: Expertise, LACMA and the Think-Tank -- How to Make the World Work -- Heritage of Our Times.
    Abstract: "TECHNOCRATS OF THE IMAGINATION traces the rise of collaborative art and technology labs in the U.S. from WWII to the present. Ryan Bishop and John Beck reveal the intertwined histories of the avant-garde art movement and the military-industrial complex, showing how radical pedagogical practices traveled from Germany's Bauhaus movement to the U.S. art world and interacted with government-funded military research and development in university laboratories. During the 1960s both media labs and studio labs leaned heavily on methods of interdisciplinary collaboration and the power of American modernity to model new modes of social organization. The book's chapters take up MIT's Center for Art, Science, and Technology, Bell Labs's E.A.T. (Experiments in Art and Technology) Salon, and Los Angeles Museum of Art's Art + Technology Program. Their interconnected history illuminates how much of contemporary media culture and aesthetics depends on the historical relationship between military, corporate, and university actors. In light of revived interest in Black Mountain College and other 1960s art and technology labs, this book draws important connections between the contemporary art world and the militarized lab model of research that has dominated the sciences since the 1950s. The authors situate the rise of collaborative art and technology projects in the 1960s within John Dewey's ideology of scientific democracy, showing how leading thinkers from the Bauhaus movement in Germany immigrated to the U.S. and brought with them a Deweyan model for collaborative and interdisciplinary art and technology research. Over the course of the decade, the U.S. government increased funding to scientific research at university and private laboratories. Beck and Bishop investigate how various art and technology projects incorporated the collaborative and innovative interdisciplinarity of the avant-garde art movement with the corporate funding structure driven by the U.S. government's military and technoscientific interests. Finally, the authors consider the legacy of 1960s art and technology projects. During the 1970s and 80s, defense R&D funding was less motivated by a Cold War corporate state, and was instead restructured according to an entrepreneurial and neoliberal model. At the same time, funding in the art world also became increasingly financialized and globalized. Today's art and technology work happens collaboratively not because of an intellectual commitment to interdis ...
    Note: A cultural politics book , Includes bibliographical references and index
    URL: Volltext  (View this content on Open Research Library)
    URL: Cover  (Thumbnail cover image)
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  • 14
    ISBN: 9781478008408 , 9781478007890
    Language: English
    Pages: xviii, 298 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Blanchette, Alexander David, 1981- Porkopolis
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Blanchette, Alex Porkopolis
    DDC: 338.1/76400973
    Keywords: Schweinehaltung ; Agroindustrie ; Fleischwirtschaft ; Ethnologie ; USA ; Swine industry ; Swine breeders ; Factory farms ; Agriculture Economic aspects ; USA ; Schweinehaltung
    Abstract: Boar. The Dover Flies -- The Herd : Intimate Biosecurity and Posthuman Labor -- Sow. Somos Puercos -- Stimulation : Instincts in Production -- Hog. Lutalyse -- Stockperson : Love, Muscles, and the Industrial Runt -- Carcass. Miss Wicked -- Biological System : Breaking In at the End of Industrial Time -- Viscera. Maybe Some Blood, but Mostly Grease -- Lifecycle : On Using All of the Porcine Species -- Epilogue: The (De-)Pigification of the World.
    Abstract: "PORKOPOLIS is an ethnographic account of hog production in "Dixon," a 15,000-resident agribusiness town in the Great Plains. In Dixon, where nearly 5,600,000 hogs are killed a year, human life has been reorganized around the life and death cycles of porcine production. Alex Blanchette accounts for the totalizing force of hog production by arguing that towns like Dixon represent a reinvestment in 20th-century notions of industry in a post-industrial United States. In practice, this means not only the taking up of industrial stock images, organization forms, and identities, but also an intense desire, on the part of agribusiness corporations, to achieve standardization-to create the "perfect" pig. To achieve standardized results, agribusiness corporations have implemented systems of full "vertical integration," in which they directly own and engineer every stage of a pig's life and death cycle. The result, Blanchette argues, is more than just an effort to create the perfect pig, but rather a calibration of human life and affect to meet the needs of porcine production. Drawing on his ethnographic fieldwork as a worker in a hog factory, Blanchette illustrates how methods of vertical integration and standardization in agribusiness factories work to transform hogs-and humans-into tokens of capitalist animality. The book is divided into five parts. Part I, "Boar," examines how corporations manage the threat of porcine diseases, and the biopolitical protocols that corporations enact in workers' homes to protect hogs. Part II, "Sow," draws from Blanchette's own experiences working the artificial insemination line, where workers are encouraged to "become the boar" with their hands to imitate mating. This part theorizes interspecies and labor politics that arise from situations in which workers are only intimate with one dimension of pigs-in this case, porcine sexual instincts. Part III, "Hog," explores the consequences of standardizing animality, where genetic refinements create litters too large to supply adequate nutrients in uterus. Part IV, "Carcass," examines the vertical integration of human workers' bodies on the assembly lines. Part V, "Viscera" explores the biological "excess" of porcine production-bones, feces, fat, livers, lungs-and corporations' desires to use "all" of the pig. This section examines how the fully integrated factory farm depends on modes of consumption that extend beyond what can be supplied by human eaters alone."
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 15
    Book
    Book
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9781478011071 , 9781478010029
    Language: English
    Pages: x, 374 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Thought in the act
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Manning, Erin For a pragmatics of the useless
    DDC: 155.8/2
    Keywords: Racism Psychological aspects ; Psychoanalysis and racism ; Racism ; USA ; Schwarze ; Nutzlosigkeit ; Neurodiversität
    Abstract: Fugitively, Approximately -- For a Pragmatics of the Useless: A Politics of the Infrathin, in Preamble -- Toward a Politics of Immediation: The Subject -- pocket practice - nestingpatching -- What Things Do When They Shape Each Other -- pocket practice - backgroundingforegrounding -- Experimenting with Immediation: Collaboration and the Politics of Fabulation: A -- Laboratory for Thought in Motion -- Practicing the Schizz -- interlude - How Do We Repair? -- Me Lo Dijo un Pajarito: Neurodiversity, Black Life, and the University As We know It -- pocket practice - livingloving -- Not at a Distance: On Touch, Synesthesia, and Other Ways of Knowing -- pocket practice - ticcingflapping -- Cephalopod Dreams: Finance at the Limit -- coda - schizzinganarchiving
    Abstract: "Leading with the proposition that "all black life is neurodiverse life," For a Pragmatics of the Useless explores how value is produced in the context of resolutely white, neurotypical modes of existence, proposing schizoanalysis as a mode of practice that opens the way for other ways of living and learning"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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