TY - BOOK AU - Guzmán,R.Andrés TI - Universal Citizenship: Latina/o Studies at the Limits of Identity T2 - Border Hispanisms SN - 9781477317648 AV - JZ1320.4 .G89 2019 U1 - 323.6 23 PY - 2021///] CY - Austin : PB - University of Texas Press, KW - Group identity KW - Hispanic Americans KW - Ethnic identity KW - Social conditions KW - Study and teaching KW - Identity politics KW - Immigration enforcement KW - World citizenship KW - SOCIAL SCIENCE / General KW - bisacsh N1 - Frontmatter --; Contents --; Acknowledgments --; Introduction Universal Citizenship at the Limits of Nature and Culture --; 1. Cause and Consistency: The Democratic Act, Universal Citizenship, and Nation --; 2. Ethnics of the Real: HB 2281 and the Alien(ated) Subject --; 3. Criminalization at the Edge of the Evental Site: Migrant “Illegality,” Universal Citizenship, and the 2006 Immigration Marches --; 4. Oscar “Zeta” Acosta and Generic Politics: At the Margins of Identity and Law --; 5. Between Crowd and Group: Fantasy, Revolutionary Nation, and the Politics of the Not-All --; Notes --; Bibliography --; Index; restricted access N2 - Recently, many critics have questioned the idea of universal citizenship by pointing to the racial, class, and gendered exclusions on which the notion of universality rests. Rather than jettison the idea of universal citizenship, however, R. Andrés Guzmán builds on these critiques to reaffirm it especially within the fields of Latina/o and ethnic studies. Beyond conceptualizing citizenship as an outcome of recognition and admittance by the nation-state—in a negotiation for the right to have rights—he asserts that, insofar as universal citizenship entails a forceful entrance into the political from the latter’s foundational exclusions, it emerges at the limits of legality and illegality via a process that exceeds identitarian capture. Drawing on Lacanian psychoanalysis and philosopher Alain Badiou’s notion of “generic politics,” Guzmán advances his argument through close analyses of various literary, cultural, and legal texts that foreground contention over the limits of political belonging. These include the French Revolution, responses to Arizona’s H.B. 2281, the 2006 immigrant rights protests in the United States, the writings of Oscar “Zeta” Acosta, Frantz Fanon’s account of Algeria’s anticolonial struggle, and more. In each case, Guzmán traces the advent of the “citizen” as a collective subject made up of anyone who seeks to radically transform the organizational coordinates of the place in which she or he lives UR - https://doi.org/10.7560/317624 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9781477317648 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9781477317648/original ER -