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In "The Gift of Freedom," Mimi Thi Nguyen develops a new
understanding of contemporary United States empire and its
self-interested claims to provide for others the advantage of human
freedom. Bringing together critiques of liberalism with
postcolonial approaches to the modern cartography of progress,
Nguyen proposes "the gift of freedom" as the name for those forces
that avow to reverence aliveness and beauty, and to govern an
enlightened humanity, while producing new subjects and
actions--such as a grateful refugee, or enduring war--in an age of
liberal empire. From the Cold War to the global war on terror, the
United States simultaneously promises the gift of freedom through
war and violence and administers the debt that follows. Focusing
here on the figure of the Vietnamese refugee as the twice-over
target of the gift of freedom--first through war, second through
refuge--Nguyen suggests that the imposition of debt precludes the
subjects of freedom from escaping those colonial histories that
deemed them "unfree." To receive the gift of freedom then is to be
indebted to empire, perhaps without end.
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