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Journal Article
boundary 2 (2021) 48 (2): 161–176.
Published: 01 May 2021
..., as expressed by its dominant segment. Drawing upon Tsirkas's readings of the poems, we can revisit the poet's archive as a kind of “taxonomy in the making” where colonial reality is inscribed. In addition, Cavafy's “recording” of the hidden material allows us to reframe our readings of his canonical poems...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2013) 40 (1): 21–39.
Published: 01 February 2013
...Melinda Cooper This article questions the culturalist and civilizational taxonomies of postsecular theory by redirecting attention toward the practical consequences of public theology in the realm of neoliberal welfare reform. Tracing the simultaneous rise of faith-based welfare and the religious...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2023) 50 (1): 137–164.
Published: 01 February 2023
...April Anson; Anindita Banerjee Abstract QAnon's rallying cry of “the storm” on January 6 and thereafter articulates a structural taxonomy of planetary scale and apocalyptic eschatology that pervades the environmental imaginaries of contemporary fascism. While they become visible only in times...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2001) 28 (1): 221–232.
Published: 01 February 2001
... are
trapped in the dialectic of sameness and difference. Shostak gives a com-
plete and detail-laden account of taxonomy to show this. Briefly, I think his
position can be encapsulated thus: Taxonomy is obsessed with evolutionary
relationships in the model of a branching tree; it therefore sees sameness...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2020) 47 (2): 181–198.
Published: 01 May 2020
... were made in the Caribbean, since those who suffered from these taxonomies of subservience, survived by constituting a counterworld to white suppres- sion. A historical streak in the spirits endured in the religious practices 3. See also Ewald 1995: 1910 12, who distinguishes Blackstone s discussion...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2005) 32 (3): 21–35.
Published: 01 August 2005
... the subject and the ‘‘polytheist’’ mind-
set, inscribes and assigns the subject’s position within a taxonomy
of phenomenal affect: the Sanskrit word bhakti literally invokes this
taxonomic division. When Lalan iconized the eleven wives of Muham-
mad as worshiping him...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2022) 49 (1): 137–163.
Published: 01 February 2022
... that are sparked by experiences with nonfiction film, recent work in anthropology, film studies, media studies, and art history on the complex taxonomy of signs developed by Charles Saunders Peirce offers a complementary approach. Work on Peirce's concept of the indexical sign, in particular, provides tools...
FIGURES
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2001) 28 (1): 153–194.
Published: 01 February 2001
... of white citizenship in engendering Asian immigrants as cultural
aliens, establishing a taxonomy of various Asian identities in terms of their
relative distance from whiteness, prompting competitive self-differentiation
among Asian groups, and adumbrating hierarchical distinctions between
Asians...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2001) 28 (2): 133–172.
Published: 01 May 2001
.... De Man points to the same issue
that concerns Kuhn when he stresses in his later work ideas about bilin-
gualism. Kuhn argues that the difference between scientific theories are not
simply matters of fact but differences of ‘‘lexical taxonomies The key re-
lation is not the correspondence of words...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2013) 40 (2): 41–51.
Published: 01 May 2013
...” in 1986,
in what remains the most substantial reflection on this subject to date, she
outlined a broad taxonomy of the then “new waves of writing on ethics” (PE,
29). As she saw it, the favoring of such literary examples, of canonical ori-
gin, psychologically rich in content, over other kinds...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2023) 50 (2): 211–222.
Published: 01 May 2023
..., in which a master race (a Brahmanical minority) will reclaim its sacral territory. In times when racial taxonomies are interrogated globally, this lucid excavation of a racial topography is indeed timely. It elaborates the deep structure of Hindutva's intrinsic racism. Chapters 3 and 4 venture...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2017) 44 (1): 79–105.
Published: 01 February 2017
... by keeping art criticism at bay. These closed societies were first directed by the
monarchy against the rise of the artistic public sphere, and they participated in the pro-
duction of knowledge, creating taxonomies from their taste and their choice in collecting.
Erudition and pleasure come together...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2014) 41 (2): 213–225.
Published: 01 May 2014
... of performative. Apter, a bit like J. L. Austin
with his bewilderingly proliferating taxonomy of performatives, offers us
the Untranslatable under such headings as “mistranslation,” “translation
failure,” “incommensurability,” “neologism,” “semantic dissonance,” “mis-
fired speech-acts,” “translation...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2008) 35 (1): 177–195.
Published: 01 February 2008
... and vulnerability within
the average citizen so as to normalize the relationship between the rule of
law and cultural identity.
In visualizing “foreigners” according to INS categorizations, U.S.
citizens’ surveillance practices linked immigrants to taxonomies that were
made to signify...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2017) 44 (4): 179–194.
Published: 01 November 2017
... (such as the members of the defense organi-
zation Hashomer, who adopted the dress and some habits of the indige-
nous Palestinians), few incorporated them into their national vision. Most
4. For a taxonomy of various nativist discourses, see Huggan 2007. Contemporary criti-
cal scholarship on indigeneity...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2000) 27 (2): 1–19.
Published: 01 May 2000
...’’ did not belong to a national community. The ir-
reducible differences and inequivalent cultural features characterizing the
‘‘mariners, castaways, and renegades’’ refused to conform to a state’s
monocultural taxonomy...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2009) 36 (2): 11–30.
Published: 01 May 2009
... are written and the taxonomy by which they
must be ordered—a category without a history.
This essay argues that the “big, ambitious novel” in the contempo-
rary United States does possess a history. That history entered a distinct
phase sixty years ago, at the moment another disreputable...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2010) 37 (1): 179–200.
Published: 01 February 2010
...
to the new currencies of thought distilled from oral culture by Plato and
Aristotle: topics, things, schemes, tropes. Sedentary, literate practices of
definition, taxonomy, exposition, and argument are invented to organize
and manipulate the new currencies. The currencies...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2006) 33 (1): 77–98.
Published: 01 February 2006
... according to the medieval taxonomy. But even a modern allegory
such as George Orwell’s 1984 or Camilo Jose Cela’s The Hive is likely to be
seen this way: there is this idea, and that one, and that one, and so on. The
average reader, schooled if at all on the traditional model or on a watered-
down...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2010) 37 (2): 133–153.
Published: 01 May 2010
...,
and constrained vitality that renders us closer to the zombie, taxonomi-
cally speaking, than Rilke’s or Blake’s tiger.)14 Ultimately, however, this is
indeed creates the subject as we know her today, via a series of interlocking and horizon-
tally repressive mechanisms. See especially Michel...
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