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recognition
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Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2014) 113 (2): 339–352.
Published: 01 April 2014
..., and self-determination. Gunn and Wilding’s article argues that the movements’ inspiring mix of “refusal” and “alternatives” can be understood within a theoretical framework that foregrounds the concepts of contradiction and recognition. In this context, the article presents Herbert Marcuse and Slavoj Žižek...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1996) 95 (4): 979–1007.
Published: 01 October 1996
...Adam Zachary Newton Copyright © 1996 by Duke University Press 1996 Adam Zachary Newton From Exegesis to Ethics: Recognition and Its Vicissitudes in Saul Bellow and Chester Himes We were the end of the line. We were the children of the immigrants who had camped at the city s back door we were...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2023) 122 (2): 386–396.
Published: 01 April 2023
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2017) 116 (3): 612–620.
Published: 01 July 2017
... Édouard Glissant, I develop the idea of trans opacity that knows the constitutive power of the image while attending to its foreclosing violence. AGAINST the DAY
Eric A. Stanley
Anti-Trans Optics: Recognition, Opacity, and the
Image of Force
If the state is ready to kill to defend itself from...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2020) 119 (2): 371–391.
Published: 01 April 2020
...Sherry Pictou The “Recognition and Implementation of Indigenous Rights Framework,” announced in 2018 by the federal government was originally hailed as a process for decolonization. Though the framework was withdrawn in December 2018, several policy and legislative initiatives give every indication...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2017) 116 (3): 621–631.
Published: 01 July 2017
...Amanda Armstrong This essay reads the condition of trans life at the moment of our ambiguous social recognition. It treats the 2016 wave of antitrans bathroom bills as an occasion to consider trans people's vexed relations to social recognition and differential vulnerabilities to state...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2011) 110 (4): 933–948.
Published: 01 October 2011
...Rebecca Scott Bray When her exhibition “Operativo” opened at New York's Y Gallery, in July 2008, Mexican artist Teresa Margolles said, “Everyone dies but not everyone is murdered. I want people to recognize that.” Ostensibly, with this call for recognition, Margolles simultaneously gestures toward...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2013) 112 (1): 163–170.
Published: 01 January 2013
...Simon Morgan Wortham In Frantz Fanon’s “The Negro and Recognition,” the Hegelian theme of mutual recognition as the origin of man’s self-consciousness and potential freedom is tested against the complex circumstances to which colonialism leads. Here, Fanon’s idea that the “Negro slave...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2015) 114 (4): 699–712.
Published: 01 October 2015
...Nancy Fraser This essay explores the possibility for twenty-first-century feminism to retrieve the insurrectionary spirit of women's liberation. It begins by charting the shift from a feminist imaginary focused on egalitarian redistribution to a feminist imaginary founded on recognition of cultural...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2008) 107 (4): 735–754.
Published: 01 October 2008
...Fouad Makki There is today widespread recognition that colonialism was ultimately about the institutionalization of an imaginary of profound social inequality anchored in relations of production and asymmetries of power that were justified by ideologies of racial superiority. The assertion...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2009) 108 (1): 1–26.
Published: 01 January 2009
..., nature, and experience, this paper proposes a different order of home making that can exist alongside indigenous sovereignty. The idea of homemaking for the nonindigenous suggested in this essay involves a recognition of productive melancholia and attempts to release the differences obscured by colonial...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2011) 110 (2): 309–327.
Published: 01 April 2011
... the possibilities of a postcolonial relationship between criminal justice institutions and Indigenous communities. The essay argues that the recognition of Indigenous claims to governance offer the possibility of new ways of thinking about criminal justice responses to entrenched social problems like crime. ©...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2011) 110 (1): 37–55.
Published: 01 January 2011
..., depend on a relaxation of resistance, which may be the result of working through: the loosening of resistance enables a new perspective, the recognition of new objects. On the other hand, such registrations may enable resistance to loosen—registering any piece of reality can change the dynamic...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2011) 110 (2): 465–486.
Published: 01 April 2011
... and the 2008 Courtney Hunt film, Frozen River , based on the cultural and political understanding of the Two Row Wampum. The Guswentah is discussed as a demonstration of sovereignty and is historicized through Cayuga chief Deskaheh's call for the recognition of Haudenosaunee sovereignty at the League...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2012) 111 (1): 1–27.
Published: 01 January 2012
... expressions of discontent cannot be understood without the recognition that this past cycle of struggles not only reconfigured the domestic relations of force in each country and the geopolitical map of the region as a whole, but also represented an enormous shift in the reconceptualization of the means, ends...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2012) 111 (1): 95–109.
Published: 01 January 2012
... relationship to an idealized past. As Cusicanqui demonstrates, this truncated recognition subordinates indigenous people, depriving them of their contemporaneity, complexity, and dynamism and, therefore, of their potential to challenge the given order. Coloniality and its relations of domination, she claims...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2012) 111 (2): 317–320.
Published: 01 April 2012
... process of market making. More recognition of complexity in financial realms can be a lever for the identification of critical alternatives for its organization. © 2012 Duke University Press 2012 Gary Herrigel
Sociability and Market Making:
A Response to LiPuma and Lee...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2012) 111 (4): 621–641.
Published: 01 October 2012
... in recessionary post-Fordism. Confronting this eventful productiveness necessitates not only a recognition of a material reworking of unemployment in post-Fordism, but also undoes the idea that the ongoing recession is linked to a return to the social formations of Fordism. This essay therefore posits...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2013) 112 (1): 71–78.
Published: 01 January 2013
... the reality of reciprocal, mutual recognition between subjects. This is the fundamental reality of which Fanon writes in the relentless self-analysis that is Black Skin, White Masks , which he expands in The Wretched of the Earth to encompass the Algerian Revolution and, by extension, the whole...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2013) 112 (2): 319–338.
Published: 01 April 2013
.... In that way, I argue that Love is as much a commentary on the civil rights era as it is on the post-civil rights, 9/11 era in which it was published. Thus, I contend that Morrison’s project in Love is both about reconciling nostalgia with a recognition of the horrors of the past and about considering, albeit...
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