Saturday, March 16, 2019
Laura Briggs Reproducing Empire: Race, Sex, Science, and U.S. Imperial
Laura Briggs Reproducing Empire Race, Sex, Science, and U.S. Imperialism in Puerto anti-racketeering lawIn Reproducing Empire, Laura Briggs provides her readers with a actually thorough history of the mainland U.S. and Puerto Rican discourses and its authors surrounding Puerto Rico and Puerto Ricans, from Puerto Ricos formation in the mainland elites mastermind as a model U.S. (not) colony in 1898* to its present positioning as semi-autonomous U.S.territory. Briggs opens her book by discussing the origins of globalization in U.S. and western European colonialism, and closes with a review of her methods, in which she calls for a new focus on subaltern studies, including a (re)focus on the authors of information (who she claims as the subjects of this book) as a lens with which to circumvent the neglect and obsessive interestin the service of the imperial project in Puerto Rico (207). Briggs identifies herself in her epilogue- I am a US. Anglo whose ties to the island are only love and a morose sense that that just as the history of the island is inescapably tied to the mainland, so the mainlands history is reciprocally tied to the island (206). Briggs notes that there is an active history of disassociation of Puerto Rico as part of the U.S., and that to speak only of Puerto Ricans in Puerto Rico as true Puerto Ricans, or to construct Puerto Rico as economically unconnected to the U.S. is a misconception, which has been historically employed to blame Puerto Rico for the U.S. subordination of it. Briggs records Puerto Ricos history as a model, testing site, or laboratory for U.S. colonial rule, focussing on the ways in which this has functioned in relation to or through (control of) Puerto Rican working class women an... ... note that island organizations that supported birth control for some other reasons often utilized funding from these larger foundations.*****While Briggs condemns the stance of nigh radical to conservative mainland organiz ations in terms of the sterilization/anti-sterilization debate, she notes at aloofness the ways in which a variety of Puerto Rican activists, such as the unfledged Lords, circumvented the racist culture of poverty arguments and the dominant tendency to deny authorisation to their subjects in their political activism outside of this debate. Her judgments on the subject of engagement with a culture of poverty argument are complex, as are the public utility company of deciding what activism is better from her perspective as an academic outsider. I willing return to this in terms of the potential usefulness of the intersections between congenital and (external?) colonial theory.
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