“住房是一项人权”

IF 1.1 2区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
M. C. Overholt
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在全球SARS-CoV-2流行病学危机中,出现了另一种传染病:驱逐流行病。这篇文章关注的是“住房妈妈”的工作,这是一个由加州奥克兰的无家可归的黑人母亲组成的组织,她们组织起来对抗剥夺、房地产投机和住房私有化。利用黑人女权主义者和有色酷儿的知识框架作为密码,通过它来解释和适当地赋予该组织的行动主义权重,文章认为,住房妈妈不仅提供了通往后财产未来的潜在路线——在这个未来中,住房被定位为一项基本人权——而且还提供了对家庭作为种族化和性别化主体形成场所的生成性批评。事实上,通过他们的工作,亲属关系形成和领土形成的概念被理解为相互构成的,废除主义的项目。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“Housing Is a Human Right”
In the midst of the global SARS-CoV-2 epidemiological crisis unfolds another contagion: the eviction epidemic. This essay attends to the work of Moms for Housing, an organization of formerly homeless and marginally housed Black mothers in Oakland, California who have organized to confront dispossession, real-estate speculation, and the privatization of housing. Using Black feminist and queer of color intellectual frameworks as ciphers through which to interpret and properly attribute weight to the organization's activism, the essay argues that Moms for Housing not only offers potential flightlines toward a post-property future—one in which housing is positioned as a basic human right—but also a generative critique of the home as a site of racialized and gendered subject formation. Indeed, through their work, the reconception of kinship formation and territorial formation are understood to be mutually constitutive, abolitionist projects.
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来源期刊
Public Culture
Public Culture Multiple-
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
6.70%
发文量
34
期刊介绍: Public Culture is a peer-reviewed interdisciplinary journal of cultural studies, published three times a year—in January, May, and September. It is sponsored by the Department of Media, Culture, and Communication, NYU. A four-time CELJ award winner, Public Culture has been publishing field-defining ethnographies and analyses of the cultural politics of globalization for over thirty years. The journal provides a forum for the discussion of the places and occasions where cultural, social, and political differences emerge as public phenomena, manifested in everything from highly particular and localized events in popular or folk culture to global advertising, consumption, and information networks. Artists, activists, and scholars, both well-established and younger, from across the humanities and social sciences and around the world, present some of their most innovative and exciting work in the pages of Public Culture.
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