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National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation
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Zeitschriftentitel: | Leonardo |
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Personen und Körperschaften: | |
In: | Leonardo, 48, 2015, 3, S. 268-269 |
Format: | E-Article |
Sprache: | Englisch |
veröffentlicht: |
MIT Press - Journals
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Schlagwörter: |
author_facet |
Blue, Ethan Blue, Ethan |
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author |
Blue, Ethan |
spellingShingle |
Blue, Ethan Leonardo National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation Computer Science Applications Music Engineering (miscellaneous) Visual Arts and Performing Arts |
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blue, ethan |
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Blue, Ethan 0024-094X 1530-9282 MIT Press - Journals Computer Science Applications Music Engineering (miscellaneous) Visual Arts and Performing Arts http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/leon_a_01027 <jats:p> The United States has one of the world’s most extensive systems of mass removal. Its historical roots draw on 19th century biopolitical traditions of border control and internal anti-immigrant policing. In the early 20th century, rail technologies enabled an economical assemblage of steel and law, of racism and politics, attempting national purification by expelling ‘undesirable aliens.’ The process differentiated between the categories of privileged citizenship and abject alienage. The possibilities of national cleansing through deportation allowed new modes of sovereign governance, defined territories, and controlled populations—foundational aspects of modern nationhood. </jats:p> National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation Leonardo |
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National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation |
title_unstemmed |
National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation |
title_full |
National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation |
title_fullStr |
National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation |
title_full_unstemmed |
National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation |
title_short |
National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation |
title_sort |
national vitality, migrant abjection, and coercive mobility: the biopolitical history of american deportation |
topic |
Computer Science Applications Music Engineering (miscellaneous) Visual Arts and Performing Arts |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/leon_a_01027 |
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2015 |
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268-269 |
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<jats:p> The United States has one of the world’s most extensive systems of mass removal. Its historical roots draw on 19th century biopolitical traditions of border control and internal anti-immigrant policing. In the early 20th century, rail technologies enabled an economical assemblage of steel and law, of racism and politics, attempting national purification by expelling ‘undesirable aliens.’ The process differentiated between the categories of privileged citizenship and abject alienage. The possibilities of national cleansing through deportation allowed new modes of sovereign governance, defined territories, and controlled populations—foundational aspects of modern nationhood. </jats:p> |
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description | <jats:p> The United States has one of the world’s most extensive systems of mass removal. Its historical roots draw on 19th century biopolitical traditions of border control and internal anti-immigrant policing. In the early 20th century, rail technologies enabled an economical assemblage of steel and law, of racism and politics, attempting national purification by expelling ‘undesirable aliens.’ The process differentiated between the categories of privileged citizenship and abject alienage. The possibilities of national cleansing through deportation allowed new modes of sovereign governance, defined territories, and controlled populations—foundational aspects of modern nationhood. </jats:p> |
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spelling | Blue, Ethan 0024-094X 1530-9282 MIT Press - Journals Computer Science Applications Music Engineering (miscellaneous) Visual Arts and Performing Arts http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/leon_a_01027 <jats:p> The United States has one of the world’s most extensive systems of mass removal. Its historical roots draw on 19th century biopolitical traditions of border control and internal anti-immigrant policing. In the early 20th century, rail technologies enabled an economical assemblage of steel and law, of racism and politics, attempting national purification by expelling ‘undesirable aliens.’ The process differentiated between the categories of privileged citizenship and abject alienage. The possibilities of national cleansing through deportation allowed new modes of sovereign governance, defined territories, and controlled populations—foundational aspects of modern nationhood. </jats:p> National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation Leonardo |
spellingShingle | Blue, Ethan, Leonardo, National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation, Computer Science Applications, Music, Engineering (miscellaneous), Visual Arts and Performing Arts |
title | National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation |
title_full | National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation |
title_fullStr | National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation |
title_full_unstemmed | National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation |
title_short | National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation |
title_sort | national vitality, migrant abjection, and coercive mobility: the biopolitical history of american deportation |
title_unstemmed | National Vitality, Migrant Abjection, and Coercive Mobility: The Biopolitical History of American Deportation |
topic | Computer Science Applications, Music, Engineering (miscellaneous), Visual Arts and Performing Arts |
url | http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/leon_a_01027 |