Sweetness in the Blood: Race, Risk, and Type 2 Diabetes. James Doucet‐Battle. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2021. xviii + 228 pp. (Cloth US$100.00; Paper US$25.00)

IF 1.6 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Transforming Anthropology Pub Date : 2022-09-26 DOI:10.1111/traa.12236
Nikhil Pandhi
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Abstract

constituents that include the book’s readers, torture survivors, a police superintendent, Chicago’s youth of color, future mayors of the city, and others. We are introduced to the egregious behavior of figures who have perpetrated torture, such as Jon Burge and Richard Zuley, but also the tenacity of Chicago’s communities of color who have resisted police violence. I was particularly moved by Ralph’s engagement with both the living and the dead, and his recognition that the living can serve as “messengers for the dead” (p. 120). The prose is consistently beautiful. For instance, Ralph develops the metaphor of the “torture tree” as “rooted in an enduring idea of threat that is foundational to life in the United States. Its trunk is the use-of-force continuum. Its branches are the police officers who personify this continuum. And its leaves are everyday incidents of police violence” (p. 2). The “black box” also emerges as a nuanced metaphor, representing a literal torture device used against prisoners. It is also a symbol of the open/ public secret of police brutality and a tool for the recovery and exposure of torture. Ralph uplifts the voices of grassroots groups such as We Charge Genocide. Ralph traces how this collective of Black youth from Chicago defied all odds to speak truth to power at the United Nations in Geneva in 2014, declaring, “We charge torture. We charge genocide” (p. 122). He emphasizes that every human has the right not to be tortured, regardless of any suspected criminal activity. Ralph takes his argument further, explicating how for Black Americans in Chicago who have been protesting police violence in the city since the 1890s, torture became a form of genocide. Ralph writes, “Deliberate exposure of African Americans to torture by our government is a form of genocide.... [T]o live a life of perpetual debilitation, to be subjected to ‘slow violence’ with no end in sight, is hardly to live at all. Having one’s humanity steadily annihilated, well, that is torture” (p. 104). The Torture Letters reveals the culture of silence and rationalization that enables this system to persist; so many Americans, including Black police officers, are complicit in statesanctioned violence. This book is a call for accountability and reparations. Ralph’s vision for racial and social justice is also expansive, reminding us that “the damaging effects of the torture tree do not stop at Chicago’s borders. The torture tree makes the entire world less safe” (p. 153). He connects torture’s transnational branches to anti-Blackness, Islamophobia, “the militarization of the police and the policification of the military” (p. 150), and US violence within its borders and beyond. Ralph captures this nexus with the experience of a Mauritanian man, Mohamedou Ould Slahi, who was tortured at the hands of a former Chicago police officer as a prisoner in Guantanamo Bay. In 2020 Ralph produced a powerful short animated film based on his open letters and published it as part of the New York Times Op-Docs series alongside an essay. This showcased the innovative work that anthropologists can do to reach a broader audience. The Torture Letters is a must read, not only for anthropologists but for all social scientists, representing the urgency of ethical and ethnographically grounded research. Ralph’s masterful genre of ethnographic lettering is a laudable model for public-facing, engaged scholarship in a world yearning for more principled and courageous voices.
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血液中的甜味:种族、风险和2型糖尿病。詹姆斯Doucet战斗。明尼阿波利斯:明尼苏达大学出版社,2021年。xviii + 228页(布100美元;论文25.00美元)
包括这本书的读者、酷刑幸存者、一名警察局长、芝加哥的有色人种青年、未来的市长等等。我们不仅了解了乔恩·伯奇(Jon Burge)和理查德·祖利(Richard Zuley)等实施酷刑的人的恶劣行为,还了解了芝加哥有色人种社区反抗警察暴力的坚韧。拉尔夫与生者和死者的接触,以及他对生者可以充当“死者的信使”的认识,令我特别感动(第120页)。这篇散文始终很美。例如,拉尔夫将“酷刑树”比喻为“根植于一种持久的威胁观念,这是美国生活的基础”。它的主干是连续使用武力。它的分支是代表这个统一体的警察。它的叶子是警察暴力的日常事件”(第2页)。“黑盒子”也作为一个微妙的隐喻出现,代表对囚犯使用的字面上的酷刑装置。它也是公开/公开警察暴行秘密的象征,也是恢复和揭露酷刑的工具。拉尔夫提升了“我们控诉种族灭绝”等草根组织的声音。拉尔夫追溯了这群来自芝加哥的黑人青年是如何在2014年日内瓦联合国大会上不顾一切地向权力说出真相的,他们宣称:“我们指控酷刑。我们指控种族灭绝”(第122页)。他强调,每个人都有权不受酷刑,无论是否涉嫌犯罪活动。拉尔夫进一步阐述了他的观点,他解释了自19世纪90年代以来一直抗议该市警察暴力的芝加哥黑人如何将酷刑变成一种种族灭绝。拉尔夫写道:“我们的政府故意让非裔美国人遭受酷刑是一种种族灭绝....过着一种永远衰弱的生活,忍受着看不到尽头的“缓慢的暴力”,根本就算不上活着。让一个人的人性逐渐被消灭,嗯,那就是折磨”(第104页)。《酷刑信》揭示了沉默和合理化的文化,使这一制度得以持续;如此多的美国人,包括黑人警察,都是国家批准的暴力的同谋。这本书是对责任和赔偿的呼吁。拉尔夫对种族和社会正义的看法也很广泛,他提醒我们,“酷刑树的破坏性影响不会局限于芝加哥的边界。”酷刑之树使整个世界更不安全”(第153页)。他将酷刑的跨国分支与反黑人、伊斯兰恐惧症、“警察的军事化和军队的政治化”(第150页)以及美国境内外的暴力联系起来。拉尔夫用毛里塔尼亚人穆罕默德·乌尔德·斯拉希的经历抓住了这种联系,他在关塔那摩湾被一名前芝加哥警官虐待。2020年,拉尔夫根据他的公开信制作了一部强大的动画短片,并作为《纽约时报》专栏系列的一部分与一篇文章一起发表。这展示了人类学家可以做的创新工作,以接触到更广泛的受众。《酷刑信》不仅是人类学家的必读之作,也是所有社会科学家的必读之作,它代表了以伦理和人种学为基础的研究的紧迫性。在这个渴望更有原则、更勇敢的声音的世界里,拉尔夫精湛的民族志书写体裁是面向公众、从事学术研究的值得称赞的典范。
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