Communicable Subjects

K. Polk
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Abstract

This chapter follows the segregated mobilization of Black military workers across the expanded playing fields of the second World War, showing how the Black body was once again rendered into a subaltern, contagious, and communicable subject of American militarism. Sex remained an important commodity traded within the economies of pleasure created through U.S. foreign military intervention, and the stigma of venereal disease once again justified the experimental use of prophylaxis drugs upon and within the bodies of African American soldiers. Representations of Black troops in military training films vacillated from heroic to lecherous, and even enlisted notable “race men” like Paul Robeson to shame soldiers into sexual abstinence. Yet Black troops encountered a world globalized through technological advances in communication, medicine, travel, and warfare, and this in turn shaped their own ideas about race, sexuality, and citizenship. Their experiences during the war and later in occupied Berlin enabled them to map the contours of a global color line through their military travels, increasing their transnational awareness of colonial policies in allied countries, and granting them a political kinship with the darker peoples of the world.
传染病学科
这一章讲述了黑人军事工作者在二战中被隔离的动员过程,展示了黑人如何再次成为美国军国主义的次等、具有传染性和可传播性的主体。性仍然是美国对外军事干预创造的快乐经济中重要的商品交易,性病的耻辱再次证明了在非裔美国士兵身上和体内使用预防性药物的实验是合理的。在军事训练电影中,黑人士兵的形象时而英勇,时而淫荡,甚至还招募了保罗·罗伯逊(Paul Robeson)等著名的“种族主义者”,让士兵感到羞耻,从而禁欲。然而,由于通讯、医药、旅行和战争方面的技术进步,黑人军队遇到了一个全球化的世界,这反过来又塑造了他们对种族、性和公民身份的看法。他们在战争期间以及后来在被占领的柏林的经历,使他们能够通过军事旅行绘制出全球肤色线的轮廓,增强了他们对盟国殖民政策的跨国意识,并使他们与世界上肤色较深的民族建立了政治亲缘关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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