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Bestial Traces - Race, Sexuality, Animality (Hardcover, New)
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Bestial Traces - Race, Sexuality, Animality (Hardcover, New)
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On February 18th, 2009, Sean Delonas published a controversial
cartoon in the New York Post depicting two policemen shooting and
killing a monkey with the caption: "They'll have to find someone
else to write the next stimulus bill." On the adjoining page was a
photo of President Barack Obama signing this very piece of
legislation into law. Although public debate over the cartoon has
centered entirely on its potentially racist overtones, we might ask
from a Darwinian perspective how the stereotype of the black ape
works to disavow a universally shared human apehood. How might we
comprehend animality in non-pejorative terms? Whereas in
contemporary race and sexuality studies the topic of animality
emerges almost exclusively in order to index the dehumanization
that makes discrimination possible, Bestial Traces argues that a
more fundamental disavowal of human animality conditions the
bestialization of racial and sexual minorities. Hence, when
conservative politicians such as Senator Rick Santorum equate
homosexuality with bestiality, they betray an anxious effort to
deny the animality inherent in all sexuality. Focusing on literary
texts by Edgar Allan Poe, Joel Chandler Harris, Richard Wright,
Philip Roth, and J.M. Coetzee, together with philosophical texts by
Derrida, Heidegger, Agamben, Freud, and Nietzsche, Peterson
maintains that the representation of social and political others as
animals can be mitigated but never finally abolished. Insofar as
humanizing the abject only vacates the structurally empty and
infinitely transposable position of "the animal," he argues that
all forms of belonging-no matter how open and hospitable they are
toward others-inevitably produce "beasts" whose exclusion
contradicts our apparent desire for nonviolence. While one might
argue that absolute political equality and inclusion remain
desirable-even if ultimately unattainable-ideals, Bestial Traces
shows that by maintaining such principles we exacerbate rather than
ameliorate violence precisely by failing to confront how
discrimination and exclusion condition all social relations.
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