TY - JOUR
T1 - The U.S. Border and the political ontology of "Assassination Nation"
T2 - Thanatological dispositifs
AU - Mendieta, Eduardo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - In this article I set out to develop an alternative analysis of national borders that grants them moral and politically normative standing while at the same time showing the limits of such merely normative analytics. The aim is to develop a genealogical analysis of the U.S. border, which is taken here as an exemplar of how not to implement borders. The first section develops what will be called here the "mobile panopticon," one that colonizes the so-called heartland, making of all citizens potentially extraditable subjects. The second section argues that the assemblage of institutions that make of the border not simply a geographic marker has become deeply enmeshed with the United States' peculiar institutions of hyperpenality and criminal branding, thus leading to the expansion and exacerbation of what I have called the "ethnoracial prison industrial complex." This analysis then offers warrants for the argument that the U.S. border is no longer a neutral arbiter of sovereignty but, instead, has become a "genocidal machine." In the closing section an engagement with Casey and Watkins's recent work on the U.S. border offers a bridge to the genealogical claim that the U.S. border is in fact a thanatological dispositif.
AB - In this article I set out to develop an alternative analysis of national borders that grants them moral and politically normative standing while at the same time showing the limits of such merely normative analytics. The aim is to develop a genealogical analysis of the U.S. border, which is taken here as an exemplar of how not to implement borders. The first section develops what will be called here the "mobile panopticon," one that colonizes the so-called heartland, making of all citizens potentially extraditable subjects. The second section argues that the assemblage of institutions that make of the border not simply a geographic marker has become deeply enmeshed with the United States' peculiar institutions of hyperpenality and criminal branding, thus leading to the expansion and exacerbation of what I have called the "ethnoracial prison industrial complex." This analysis then offers warrants for the argument that the U.S. border is no longer a neutral arbiter of sovereignty but, instead, has become a "genocidal machine." In the closing section an engagement with Casey and Watkins's recent work on the U.S. border offers a bridge to the genealogical claim that the U.S. border is in fact a thanatological dispositif.
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U2 - 10.5325/jspecphil.31.1.0082
DO - 10.5325/jspecphil.31.1.0082
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85013422180
SN - 0891-625X
VL - 31
SP - 82
EP - 100
JO - Journal of Speculative Philosophy
JF - Journal of Speculative Philosophy
IS - 1
ER -