
Contents
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The Race That Kills Itself The Race That Kills Itself
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Animating the Social Body Animating the Social Body
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Immigration Restrictions and the Biologization of the Social Body Immigration Restrictions and the Biologization of the Social Body
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The Sexuality of Population The Sexuality of Population
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Suicide, a Biopolitical Scandal Suicide, a Biopolitical Scandal
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Literary Counter-Conduct Literary Counter-Conduct
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Cite
Abstract
Taking up Foucault’s underattended insight that sexuality sutures the individual body and the population, the Introduction theorizes the sexuality of population. Setting out the major theoretical and historical throughlines of the project, it historicizes the Progressive Era consolidation of the US biopolitical state, at a moment when the term “race suicide” was popularized and the concept of suicide underwent reconfiguration. Charting how the anthropomorphizing trope of the social body—the rhetoric that undergirds race suicide—came to life under biopower’s regime, it elaborates how the US social body was discursively animated as a precarious life that needs protection from enemies: the external threat of immigrants and the internal threat of degeneration. Thus, this Introduction traces how race, sexuality, and the social body were amalgamated together to constitute the biopolitical mandate to live and reproduce, and how suicide was reimagined as a way to sidestep this coagulation’s bracing impact.
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