Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1541177871> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 87 of
87
with 100 items per page.
- W1541177871 endingPage "363" @default.
- W1541177871 startingPage "341" @default.
- W1541177871 abstract "La violence qu'ont subie les prisonniers iraquiens a Abu Ghraib, aux mains de soldats, femmes et hommes, des Etats-Unis d'Amerique et du Royaume Uni, etait tres clairement sexualisee. Une pyramide de prisonniers mâles nus, forces de simuler la sodomie, communiquait de facon graphique que le projet de l'empire, la domination de l'Occident par rapport au non-Occident, exige des infusions puissantes d'une heterosexualite et d'un patriarcat violents. Le present article explore la lecon a tirer de l'incident d'Abu Ghraib sur la facon dont l'empire prend corps et comment il vient a exister par de multiples systemes de domination. Dans la premiere partie, l'auteure discute du role des pratiques visuelles et de la production de hierarchies sexuelles, element essentiel en raison des 1800 photos de torture. Une deuxieme partie analyse la violence comme rituel qui permet aux hommes blancs d'atteindre un sens de maitrise sur l'Autre racialise, en meme temps qu'elle fournit une intimite sexualisee interdite par la suprematie et le patriarcat blancs. Dans la troisieme partie de cet article, l'auteure etudie le role des femmes blanches a Abu Ghraib, soutenant que c'est comme membres de leur race que l'on peut le mieux saisir la participation des femmes a cette violence—participation qui facilite la meme maitrise et intimite genree que la violence raciale procure aux hommes blancs. En conclusion, l'auteure examine le regime de la terreur raciale illustree par Abu Ghraib et d'autres endroits, en insistant sur la terreur comme un « marche de » qui organise la maniere par laquelle les corps en viennent a exprimer les arrangements raciaux de l'empire. The violence inflicted on Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib, by both male and female American and British soldiers, was very clearly sexualized. A pyramid of naked male prisoners forced to simulate sodomy conveyed graphically that the project of empire, the West's domination of the non-West, requires strong infusions of a violent heterosexuality and patriarchy. This article explores what we can learn from Abu Ghraib about how empire is embodied and how it comes into existence through multiple systems of domination. In the first part, I discuss the role of visual practices and the making of racial hierarchies, a consideration made necessary by the 1,800 photos of torture. In the second part, I consider the violence as a ritual that enables white men to achieve a sense of mastery over the racial other, at the same time that it provides a sexualized intimacy forbidden in white supremacy and patriarchy. In the third part of this article, I consider the role of white women at Abu Ghraib, arguing that it is as members of their race that we can best grasp white women's participation in the violence—a participation that facilitates the same mastery and gendered intimacy afforded to white men who engage in racial violence. In the conclusion, I consider the regime of racial terror in evidence at Abu Ghraib and other places, focusing on terror as a trade in mythologies that organizes the way that bodies come to express the racial arrangements of empire." @default.
- W1541177871 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1541177871 creator A5040733559 @default.
- W1541177871 date "2005-01-01" @default.
- W1541177871 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W1541177871 title "How Is White Supremacy Embodied? Sexualized Racial Violence at Abu Ghraib" @default.
- W1541177871 cites W1506075346 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W151754743 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W1543902886 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W1595131347 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W2017819849 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W2033503404 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W2069366313 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W2076283118 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W2085302333 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W2105792542 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W2155905139 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W2197202408 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W2342866895 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W2586662741 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W2794066231 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W2800851702 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W3197799088 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W602322695 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W604201901 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W607371595 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W625182931 @default.
- W1541177871 cites W71500497 @default.
- W1541177871 hasPublicationYear "2005" @default.
- W1541177871 type Work @default.
- W1541177871 sameAs 1541177871 @default.
- W1541177871 citedByCount "18" @default.
- W1541177871 countsByYear W15411778712012 @default.
- W1541177871 countsByYear W15411778712013 @default.
- W1541177871 countsByYear W15411778712014 @default.
- W1541177871 countsByYear W15411778712015 @default.
- W1541177871 countsByYear W15411778712018 @default.
- W1541177871 countsByYear W15411778712020 @default.
- W1541177871 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1541177871 hasAuthorship W1541177871A5040733559 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConcept C139838865 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConcept C15708023 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConcept C2549261 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConcept C2778325511 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConceptScore W1541177871C139838865 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConceptScore W1541177871C142362112 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConceptScore W1541177871C144024400 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConceptScore W1541177871C15708023 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConceptScore W1541177871C17744445 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConceptScore W1541177871C199539241 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConceptScore W1541177871C2549261 @default.
- W1541177871 hasConceptScore W1541177871C2778325511 @default.
- W1541177871 hasIssue "2" @default.
- W1541177871 hasLocation W15411778711 @default.
- W1541177871 hasOpenAccess W1541177871 @default.
- W1541177871 hasPrimaryLocation W15411778711 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W1496772144 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W150846316 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W151754743 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W1528593916 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W1992373299 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2007121047 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2031800613 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2070147904 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2085302333 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2123137678 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2170710498 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2173288171 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2273472637 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2337002970 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2736322951 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2736917299 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2951836564 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W3137389637 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W1574373005 @default.
- W1541177871 hasRelatedWork W2169345157 @default.
- W1541177871 hasVolume "17" @default.
- W1541177871 isParatext "false" @default.
- W1541177871 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W1541177871 magId "1541177871" @default.
- W1541177871 workType "article" @default.