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- W3100980012 abstract "In 2018, after it became public that children were being separated from their parents at U.S.-Mexico border by members of the U.S. Military and Border Control, that some of those children were locked in cages, that some families were being tear-glassed and that immigration officials were abusing some families, two major responses were evoked. Some people were scandalized by those acts and condemned them as terrible. By contrast, others made excuses and claimed that it was necessary and rational response to defend and protect U.S. borders while dismissing those condeming the acts as simply falling victim to their emotions. What interests me is not the differentiated response per se, but rather how the emotional responses on both sides—especially the anger expressed by various constituencies—are constructed, expressed, and regulated to validate and protect privilege of some, while discrediting and silencing others. In this essay, I will highlight this by reviewing three prominent feminist accounts on anger—Martha Nussbaum’s, Audre Lorde’s, and Marilyn Frye’s—and what they each reveal how anger is operating and being constructed in the debate about family separation in the United States." @default.
- W3100980012 created "2020-11-23" @default.
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- W3100980012 date "2020-11-13" @default.
- W3100980012 modified "2023-10-05" @default.
- W3100980012 title "“Quit Trying to Make Us Feel Teary-Eyed for the Children!” Constructions of Emotion, Anger, and Immigration Injustice" @default.
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- W3100980012 doi "https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-57111-5_6" @default.
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