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'Rigorous, impassioned and urgent' - Ash Sarkar We are in a moment
of profound overlapping crises. The landscape of politics and
entitlement is being rapidly remade. As movements against colonial
legacies and state violence coincide with the rise of authoritarian
regimes, it is the lens of racism, and the politics of race, that
offers the sharpest focus. In Empire's Endgame, eight leading
scholars make a powerful intervention in debates around racial
capitalism and political crisis in Britain. While the 'hostile
environment' policy and Brexit referendum have thrown the
centrality of race into sharp relief, discussions of racism have
too often focused on individual behaviours. Foregrounding instead
the wider political and economic context, the authors trace the
ways in which the legacies of empire have been reshaped by global
capitalism, the digital environment and the instability of the
nation-state. Engaging with movements such as Black Lives Matter
and Rhodes Must Fall, Empire's Endgame offers both an original
perspective on race, media, the state and criminalisation, and a
political vision that includes rather than expels in the face of
crisis.
'Rigorous, impassioned and urgent' - Ash Sarkar We are in a moment
of profound overlapping crises. The landscape of politics and
entitlement is being rapidly remade. As movements against colonial
legacies and state violence coincide with the rise of authoritarian
regimes, it is the lens of racism, and the politics of race, that
offers the sharpest focus. In Empire's Endgame, eight leading
scholars make a powerful intervention in debates around racial
capitalism and political crisis in Britain. While the 'hostile
environment' policy and Brexit referendum have thrown the
centrality of race into sharp relief, discussions of racism have
too often focused on individual behaviours. Foregrounding instead
the wider political and economic context, the authors trace the
ways in which the legacies of empire have been reshaped by global
capitalism, the digital environment and the instability of the
nation-state. Engaging with movements such as Black Lives Matter
and Rhodes Must Fall, Empire's Endgame offers both an original
perspective on race, media, the state and criminalisation, and a
political vision that includes rather than expels in the face of
crisis.
If race is increasingly understood to be socially constructed, why
does it continue to seem like a physiological reality? The trickery
of race, Sita Balani argues, comes down to how it is embedded in
everyday life through the domain we take to be most intimate and
essential: sexuality. Modernity inaugurates a new political subject
made legible as an individual through the nuclear family, sexual
adventure and the pursuit of romantic love. By examining the
regulation of sexual life at Britain's borders, in colonial India,
and through the functioning of the welfare state, marriage laws,
education, and counterterrorism, Balani reveals that sexuality has
become fatally intertwined with the making of race.
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