People are said to acquire their affiliations of ethnicity,
race, and sex at birth. Hence, these affiliations have long been
understood to be natural, independent of the ability of political
societies to define who we are. "Reproducing the State" vigorously
challenges the conventional view, as well as post-structuralist
scholarship that minimizes state power. Jacqueline Stevens examines
birth-based theories of membership and group affiliations in
political societies ranging from the Athenian polis, to tribes of
Australia, to the French republic, to the contemporary United
States. The book details how political societies determine the
kinship rules that are used to reproduce political societies.
Stevens analyzes the ways that ancestral and territorial birth
rules for membership in political societies pattern other
intergenerational affiliations. She shows how the notion of
ethnicity depends on the implicit or explicit invocation of a past,
present, or future political society. She also shows how geography
is used to represent political regions, including continents, as
the seemingly natural underpinning for racial taxonomies
perpetuated through miscegenation laws and birth certificates. And
Stevens argues that sex differences are also constituted through
membership practices of political societies. In its chronological
and disciplinary range, "Reproducing the State" will reward the
interest of scholars in many fields, including anthropology,
history, political science, sociology, women's studies, race
studies, and ethnic studies.
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