A transformative progressive politics requires the state's
reimagining. But how should the state be reimagined, and what can
invigorate this process? In Feeling Like a State, Davina Cooper
explores the unexpected contribution a legal drama of withdrawal
might make to conceptualizing a more socially just, participative
state. In recent years, as gay rights have expanded, some
conservative Christians-from charities to guesthouse owners and
county clerks-have denied people inclusion, goods, and services
because of their sexuality. In turn, liberal public bodies have
withdrawn contracts, subsidies, and career progression from
withholding conservative Christians. Cooper takes up the discourses
and practices expressed in this legal conflict to animate and
support an account of the state as heterogeneous, plural, and
erotic. Arguing for the urgent need to put new imaginative forms
into practice, Cooper examines how dissident and experimental
institutional thinking materialize as people assert a democratic
readiness to recraft the state.
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