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Este volumen reúne las conocidas y bastante discutidas ponencias W. E. B. Du Bois que Stuart Hall impartiera en la Universidad de Harvard en 1994. En el momento de su mayor plenitud intelectual, el jaimacano disecciona críticamente el concepto de raza, su sustitución moderna por el de etnia y la remisión de este último a la nación política. Se tata de un ejercicio sofisticado y agudo, en el que muestra cómo el horizonte de la raza, aun desprovisto de toda la vieja ideología biologicista y pseudocientífica, sigue marcando la experiencia social contemporánea, tanto en sus formas racistas como antirracistas. El marco a combatir es el de un esencialismo con el que se marginan, pero también se afirman, determinados grupos sociales. A su vez, la expresión aparentemente más culturalista de la «etnia» tampoco supera la imagen de unas comunidades segregadas, cerradas, culturalmente autosuficientes.
Hall nos muestra aquí cómo la política del siglo XXI está esencialmente atravesada por el hecho de la diferencia, apuntalada además por la nueva ola de migraciones masivas con dirección sur-norte. La articulación de esta política en forma de alianzas abiertas, a partir de la experiencia de la diáspora, del mestizaje y de la traducción de experiencias distintas parece ser el reto de este libro, así como de todos aquellos implicados en una política netamente emancipatoria.
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Previews available in: Spanish English
Edition | Availability |
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1
El triángulo funesto: Raza, etnia, nación
2020, Traficantes de Sueños
Print book
in Spanish
- 1st ed.
8412047842 9788412047844
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2
The fateful triangle: race, ethnicity, nation
2017, Harvard University Press
in English
0674976525 9780674976528
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Identities are not something we are born with, Hall argues, but are formed and transformed in the discourses of nation, ethnicity, and race. Casting his glance over the modern age, he shows how the imperial view of civilized-versus-barbarian gave way to a politics of identification that grew ever more unpredictable under late 20th century conditions of globalization. Race was long ago discredited by science yet it persists because it operates as a signifier, making meanings out of the binary representation of difference. From Renaissance to Enlightenment, stability prevailed in a West-centric order that fixed "their difference" against "our modernity," but the multi-accentual slide of signifiers also gave rise to new identities among subordinated subjects as well. Ethnicities that exclude others close down the multiple voicing built into every discourse, whereas Hall shows that "black" took on alternative meaning when Caribbean and South Asian migrants fought racism through alliances based not on genetic or cultural grounds but by opening the signifying chain to recodings. Migration is today at the heart of the contradictory tensions thrown up by global dislocations that have unsettled traditional bonds of collective belonging, although when nations make the rights of citizenship conditional on cultural homogeniety what Hall reveals is the extent to which liberal democracy's universalist values were grounded in an assimilationist worldview that has yet to be fully dismantled.--
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