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Going PublicHannah Arendt, Immigrant Action, and the Space of AppearanceHaverford College, Pennsylvania While other theorists have turned to Arendts analysis of statelessness and superfluity to consider questions of immigration, "illegality," and the status of noncitizens, this essay argues that Arendts account of labor and her nonconsequentialist account of action offer a richer optic for considering the undocumented in the United States. To explore this claim, this essay constructs an alternate account of the nationwide demonstrations for immigrant rights that occurred in 2006. Rather than defining "success" in terms of replicability or immediate legislative results, the authors analysis of the 2006 protests emphasizes the significance of noncitizens laying claim to the public realm. Considering Michael Warners concept of counterpublics, the author argues that the demonstrations can be best understood as a moment of initiation and an inaugural performance of the political. Rereading Arendts notion of animal laborans, the essay concludes by exploring the limitations of noncitizens invoking labor as a way to gain civic standing.
Key Words: immigration Latinos Arendt labor freedom
This version was published on October
1, 2009 Political Theory, Vol. 37, No. 5,
595-622 (2009) |
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