Missing : Youth, Citizenship, and Empire after 9/11

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Missing : Youth, Citizenship, and Empire after 9/11

  • ウェブストア価格 ¥8,718(本体¥7,926)
  • Duke University Press(2009/05発売)
  • 外貨定価 US$ 39.95
  • 【ウェブストア限定】洋書・洋古書ポイント5倍対象商品(~2/28)
  • ポイント 395pt
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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 352 p./サイズ 13 illus.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780822344094
  • DDC分類 305.69708995073

基本説明

Drawing on ethnographic research in a New England high school, Maira investigates the cultural dimensions of citizenship for South Asian Muslim students and their relationship to the state in the everyday contexts of education, labor, leisure, dissent, betrayal, and loss.

Full Description

In Missing, Sunaina Marr Maira explores how young South Asian Muslim immigrants living in the United States experienced and understood national belonging (or exclusion) at a particular moment in the history of U.S. imperialism: in the years immediately following September 11, 2001. Drawing on ethnographic research in a New England high school, Maira investigates the cultural dimensions of citizenship for South Asian Muslim students and their relationship to the state in the everyday contexts of education, labor, leisure, dissent, betrayal, and loss. The narratives of the mostly working-class youth she focuses on demonstrate how cultural citizenship is produced in school, at home, at work, and in popular culture. Maira examines how young South Asian Muslims made sense of the political and historical forces shaping their lives and developed their own forms of political critique and modes of dissent, which she links both to their experiences following September 11, 2001, and to a longer history of regimes of surveillance and repression in the United States.Bringing grounded ethnographic analysis to the critique of U.S. empire, Maira teases out the ways that imperial power affects the everyday lives of young immigrants in the United States. She illuminates the paradoxes of national belonging, exclusion, alienation, and political expression facing a generation of Muslim youth coming of age at this particular moment. She also sheds new light on larger questions about civil rights, globalization, and U.S. foreign policy. Maira demonstrates that a particular subjectivity, the "imperial feeling" of the present historical moment, is linked not just to issues of war and terrorism but also to migration and work, popular culture and global media, family and belonging.

Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. South Asian Muslim Youth in the United States after 9/11 1
1. Imperial Feelings: U.S. Empire and the War on Terror 37
2. Cultural Citizenship 76
3. Transnational Citizenship: Flexibility and Control 95
4. Economies of Citizenship: Work, Play, and Polyculturalism 128
5. Dissenting Citizenship: Orientalisms, Feminisms, and Dissenting Feelings 190
6. Missing: Fear, Complicity, and Solidarity 258
Appendix. A Note on Methods 291
Notes 293
Bibliography 305
Index 329

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