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Beside You in Time
Elizabeth Freeman
其他書名
Sense Methods and Queer Sociabilities in the American Nineteenth Century
出版
Duke University Press
, 2019-09-06
主題
Literary Criticism / Semiotics & Theory
Social Science / Gender Studies
Social Science / Ethnic Studies / American / African American & Black Studies
ISBN
147800567X
9781478005674
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=UAiqDwAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
In
Beside You in Time
Elizabeth Freeman expands biopolitical and queer theory by outlining a temporal view of the long nineteenth century. Drawing on Foucauldian notions of discipline as a regime that yoked the human body to time, Freeman shows how time became a social and sensory means by which people assembled into groups in ways that resisted disciplinary forces. She tracks temporalized bodies across many entangled regimes—religion, secularity, race, historiography, health, and sexuality—and examines how those bodies act in relation to those regimes. In analyses of the use of rhythmic dance by the Shakers; African American slave narratives; literature by Mark Twain, Pauline Hopkins, Herman Melville, and others; and how Catholic sacraments conjoined people across historical boundaries, Freeman makes the case for the body as an instrument of what she calls queer hypersociality. As a mode of being in which bodies are connected to others and their histories across and throughout time, queer hypersociality, Freeman contends, provides the means for subjugated bodies to escape disciplinary regimes of time and to create new social worlds.