This research paper is an attempt to investigate the phenomenon of global terrorism and its threats to the security of the state. The study clarifies the concept of terrorism and it its definition, then the categories of terrorism. Next, it shows how terrorism became a global phenomenon through the
Brown Threat: Identification in the Security State
β Scribed by Kumarini Silva
- Publisher
- University of Minnesota Press
- Year
- 2016
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 224
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
What is βbrownβ inβand beyondβthe context of American identity politics? How has the concept changed since 9/11? In the most sustained examination of these questions to date, Kumarini Silva argues that βbrownβ is no longer conceived of solely as a cultural, ethnic, or political identity. Instead, after 9/11, the Patriot Act, and the wars in Iran, Iraq, and Afghanistan, it has also become a concept and, indeed, a strategy of identificationβone rooted in xenophobic, imperialistic, and racist ideologies to target those who do not neatly fit or subscribe to ideas of nationhood.
Interweaving personal narratives, ethnographic research, analyses of popular events like the Miss America pageant, and films and TV shows such as the Harold and Kumar franchise and Black-ish, Silva maps junctures where the ideological, political, and mediated terrain intersect, resulting in an appetite for all things βbrownβ (especially South Asian brown) by U.S. consumers, while political and nationalist discourses and legal structures (immigration, emigration, migration, outsourcing, incarceration) conspire to control brown bodies both within and outside the United States.
Silva explores this contradictory relationship between representation and reality, arguing that the representation mediates and manages the anxieties that come from contemporary global realities, in which brown spaces, like India, Pakistan, and the Middle East pose key economic, security, and political challenges to the United States. While racism is hardly new, what makes this iteration of brown new is that anyone or any group, at any time, can be branded as deviant, as a threat.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
Introduction: Americaβs Move from Identity to Identification
1. What Is Brown? Theorizing Race in Everyday Life
2. Un-American: Surviving through Patriotic Performances
3. Expulsion and What Is Not: Defining Worthiness of American Citizenship
4. Blackness in Brown Times: The Medicalization of Racism
Conclusion: Wielding Identity to Organize Warfare
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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