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Books > Social sciences > Politics & government > Comparative politics
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If We Were Kin - Race, Identification, and Intimate Political Appeals (Hardcover)
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If We Were Kin - Race, Identification, and Intimate Political Appeals (Hardcover)
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In June 1973, amid ideological rifts in the U.S. gay liberation
movement, thousands of people gathered in New York City's
Washington Square Park to commemorate the fourth anniversary of the
Stonewall Rebellion. Partway through the rally, Street Transvestite
Action Revolutionaries (STAR) co-founder Sylvia Rivera fought her
way to the stage to address the predominantly white, middle class
lesbian and gay crowd. Over the din of their boos and jeers, Rivera
reprimanded the crowd for failing in their responsibilities to
their "gay brothers and sisters" in jail, detailed the sacrifices
she had made for the movement, and called them into the politics of
STAR, "The people who are trying to do something for all of us and
not men and women that belong to a white middle class white club!
And that is what you all belong to!" Rivera's appeal thus worked
through a push-pull of distance and belonging, shaming the movement
for its assimilatory turn while invoking forms of kinship and
calling her listeners into an expansive multi-issue liberation
politics. How does a sense of intimacy call people into political
community? If We Were Kin is about the we of politics—how that we
is made, fought over, and remade—and how these struggles lie at
the very core of questions about power and political change. Across
a range of sites in racial justice and queer/trans liberation
movements—from speeches by James Baldwin and Sylvia Rivera in the
1960s and 1970s to contemporary immigrant justice campaigns by the
antiracist LGBTQ organization Southerners on New Ground
(SONG)—Lisa Beard traces a distinct lineage of appeals that
challenge atomized and hierarchical racial formations in the United
States and advance powerful visions of political relationships
rooted in mutuality and shared freedom. In plumbing the deeper
registers of identificatory appeals, Beard transforms
understandings of identity, solidarity, political confrontation,
and apparent loss/failure as points of possibility. If We Were Kin
offers an innovative account of racial politics and political
theory rooted in Black, Latinx, queer, and trans activism in
twentieth and twenty-first century America.
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