Death beyond Disavowal: The Impossible Politics of Difference

Death beyond Disavowal: The Impossible Politics of Difference

by Grace Kyungwon Hong
Death beyond Disavowal: The Impossible Politics of Difference

Death beyond Disavowal: The Impossible Politics of Difference

by Grace Kyungwon Hong

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Overview

Death beyond Disavowal utilizes “difference” as theorized by women of color feminists to analyze works of cultural production by people of color as expressing a powerful antidote to the erasures of contemporary neoliberalism.

According to Grace Kyungwon Hong, neoliberalism is first and foremost a structure of disavowal enacted as a reaction to the successes of the movements for decolonization, desegregation, and liberation of the post–World War II era. It emphasizes the selective and uneven affirmation and incorporation of subjects and ideas that were formerly categorically marginalized, particularly through invitation into reproductive respectability. It does so in order to suggest that racial, gendered, and sexualized violence and inequity are conditions of the past, rather than the foundations of contemporary neoliberalism’s exacerbation of premature death. Neoliberal ideologies hold out the promise of protection from premature death in exchange for complicity with this pretense.

In Audre Lorde’s Sister Outsider, Cherríe Moraga’s The Last Generation and Waiting in the Wings, Oscar Zeta Acosta’s The Revolt of the Cockroach People, Ana Castillo’s So Far from God, Gayl Jones’s Corregidora, Isaac Julien’s Looking for Langston, Inge Blackman’s B. D. Women, Rodney Evans’s Brother to Brother, and the work of the late Barbara Christian, Death beyond Disavowal finds the memories of death and precarity that neoliberal ideologies attempt to erase.

Hong posits cultural production as a compelling rejoinder to neoliberalism’s violences. She situates women of color feminism, often dismissed as narrow or limited in its effect, as a potent diagnosis of and alternative to such violences. And she argues for the importance of women of color feminism to any critical engagement with contemporary neoliberalism.



Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781452945484
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Publication date: 10/01/2015
Series: Difference Incorporated
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 200
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Grace Kyungwon Hong is associate professor of Asian American studies and gender studies at UCLA. She is author of The Ruptures of American Capital (Minnesota, 2006) and coeditor of Strange Affinities: The Gender and Sexual Politics of Comparative Racialization.


Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction: Neoliberal Disavowal and the Politics of the Impossible
1. Fun with Death and Dismemberment: Irony, Farce, and Nationalist Memorialization
2. On Being Wrong and Feeling Right: Cherríe Moraga and Audre Lorde
3. Blues Futurity and Queer Improvisation
4. Bringing Out the Dead: Black Feminism’s Prophetic Vision
Epilogue: Life, Death, and Everything in Between
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index

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