秘密渗透:体现的殖民主义、性别暴力和种族化的情感管理

Q3 Social Sciences Studies in Gender and Sexuality Pub Date : 2021-10-02 DOI:10.1080/15240657.2021.1996735
N. Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Abeer Otman, Rasmieyh R. Abdelnabi
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要保密作为一种治理模式,为分析和理解国家对那些生活在定居者殖民压迫下的人的暴力行为提供了一个新的场所。在这篇文章中,我们调查了以色列政府的政策以及利用“秘密信息”侵犯、渗透和渗透被占领东耶路撒冷巴勒斯坦妇女的生活、身体、心理和思想。通过分享巴勒斯坦妇女的故事,我们可以通过我们所定义的性别安全保密,一窥殖民权力的运作。这些叙述揭露了秘密心理政治工作的性别方面,渗透、工程和/或破坏了被殖民妇女的国家和社会纽带、人格和性的构建。我们认为,保密,就像国家将性别暴力军事化和心理化一样,会增加对身体和情感的社会和私人约束。秘密受到一种具体的、情感的反政治的挑战,这种反政治拒绝并挑战秘密的力量。
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Secret Penetrabilities: Embodied Coloniality, Gendered Violence, and the Racialized Policing of Affects
ABSTRACT Secrecy as a mode of governance offers a new site to analyze and understand the state’s violence against those living under settler colonial oppression. In this article, we investigate the Israeli state’s policies and use of “secret information” to violate, infiltrate, and penetrate Palestinian women’s lives, bodies, psyches, and minds in Occupied East Jerusalem. By sharing Palestinian women’s narratives, we offer a glimpse into the operation of colonial power via what we define as gendered securitized secrecy. The narratives expose the gendered aspects of the psychopolitical work of secrecy in penetrating, engineering, and/or destabilizing the constructions of national and social bonds, personhood, and sexuality among colonized women. We argue that secrecy, as state-militarized and psychologized gendered violence, increases social and private disciplining of bodies and affects. Secrecy is challenged by an embodied and affective counterpolitics that refuses and defies the power of secrecy.
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来源期刊
Studies in Gender and Sexuality
Studies in Gender and Sexuality Social Sciences-Gender Studies
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: Beginning in the final two decades of the 20th century, the study of gender and sexuality has been revived from a variety of directions: the traditions of feminist scholarship, postclassical and postmodern psychoanalytic theory, developmental research, and cultural studies have all contributed to renewed fascination with those powerfully formative aspects of subjectivity that fall within the rubric of "gender" and "sexuality." Clinicians, for their part, have returned to gender and sexuality with heightened sensitivity to the role of these constructs in the treatment situation, including the richly variegated ways in which assumptions about gender and sexuality enter into our understandings of "normality" and "pathology."
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