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Between and Beyond: Negotiating Belonging Within Queer Borderlands
ABSTRACT Belonging is an affective, social and biopolitical phenomenon which is relationally negotiated and which produces material and symbolic ‘borders’. Subsequently, the politics of belonging refers to the construction, maintenance and policing of the borders of belonging.
Meg Poff
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Brutal Belonging in Brutal Spaces
2014This chapter is about grindcore spaces — the pubs and raibuhausu — that host both cities grindcore scenes. Brutal belonging is less about material places than the abstract intensities of feeling, or affect, generated through participation in grindcore music.
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2023
In Brutalism, eminent social and critical theorist Achille Mbembe invokes the architectural aesthetic of brutalism to describe our moment, caught up in the pathos of demolition and production on a planetary scale. Just as brutalist architecture creates an affect of overwhelming weight and destruction, Mbembe contends that contemporary capitalism ...
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In Brutalism, eminent social and critical theorist Achille Mbembe invokes the architectural aesthetic of brutalism to describe our moment, caught up in the pathos of demolition and production on a planetary scale. Just as brutalist architecture creates an affect of overwhelming weight and destruction, Mbembe contends that contemporary capitalism ...
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2020
In the wake of the movement for Black life, a critique of Brutalist conservation and architectural culture, based on my experiences teaching and learning in Minneapolis and New York.
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In the wake of the movement for Black life, a critique of Brutalist conservation and architectural culture, based on my experiences teaching and learning in Minneapolis and New York.
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The disturbing case of the 1997 torture and rape of Haitian immigrant Abner Louima by NYPD officers is taken up as a focal point in this chapter. It examines the interplay between police brutality, Black religions, and the enduring legacy of slavery in everyday police practices.
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Abstract What does it mean for people to come to fail to recognize their own humanity due to severe destitution or mistreatment? This chapter looks into this question by analysing the so-called ‘brutalization’ of refugees, asylum seekers, and unwanted migrants in the setting of immigration detention centres.
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