ANTHR 7176

ANTHR 7176

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2018-2019.

Liberal feminists and political theorists argue that sentiments such as compassion and empathy have the capacity to alert us to suffering, injustice, and oppression, and thus incite transformative political action. This interdisciplinary seminar explores the challenges to this theory by staging a conversation between postcolonial, feminist, and queer theories of affect, and anthropological critiques of humanitarian projects. Sentiments are mobilized to defend borders, wage wars, grant asylum to refugees, provide medical care and disaster relief, and inspire feminist activism. We will analyze how these gendered and racialized ethical projects and political regimes are co-constituted, and how they mediate access to resources and survival, as well as political agency, subjectivity, citizenship, and national belonging.

When Offered Fall.

Comments Co-meets with ANTHR 4176/FGSS 4876/GOVT 4745/LGBT 4876.

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Syllabi: none
  • 16822 ANTHR 7176   SEM 101