Exceptional Violence: Embodied Citizenship in Transnational Jamaica

Exceptional Violence: Embodied Citizenship in Transnational Jamaica

by Deborah A. Thomas
Exceptional Violence: Embodied Citizenship in Transnational Jamaica

Exceptional Violence: Embodied Citizenship in Transnational Jamaica

by Deborah A. Thomas

eBook

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Overview

Exceptional Violence is a sophisticated examination of postcolonial state formation in the Caribbean, considered across time and space, from the period of imperial New World expansion to the contemporary neoliberal era, and from neighborhood dynamics in Kingston to transnational socioeconomic and political fields. Deborah A. Thomas takes as her immediate focus violence in Jamaica and representations of that violence as they circulate within the country and abroad. Through an analysis encompassing Kingston communities, Jamaica’s national media, works of popular culture, notions of respectability, practices of punishment and discipline during slavery, the effects of intensified migration, and Jamaica’s national cultural policy, Thomas develops several arguments. Violence in Jamaica is the complicated result of a structural history of colonialism and underdevelopment, not a cultural characteristic passed from one generation to the next. Citizenship is embodied; scholars must be attentive to how race, gender, and sexuality have been made to matter over time. Suggesting that anthropologists in the United States should engage more deeply with history and political economy, Thomas mobilizes a concept of reparations as a framework for thinking, a rubric useful in its emphasis on structural and historical lineages.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780822394556
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication date: 10/05/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Deborah A. Thomas is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania. She is the author of Modern Blackness: Nationalism, Globalization, and the Politics of Culture in Jamaica and a co-editor of Globalization and Race: Transformations in the Cultural Production of Blackness, both also published by Duke University Press.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction. Moving Bodies 1

1. Dead Bodies, 2004–2005 23

2. Deviant Bodies, 2005/1945 53

3. Spectacular Bodies, 1816/2007 87

4. Public Bodies, 2003 125

5. Resurrected Bodies, 1963/2007 173

CODA Repairing Bodies 221

Notes 239

References 257

Index 289
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