ABSTRACT

What does disgust have to do with citizenship? How might pain and pleasure, movement, taste, sound and smell be configured as aspects of national belonging? Senses and Citizenships: Embodying Political Life examines the intersections between sensory phenomena and national and supra-national forms of belonging, introducing the new concept of sensory citizenship. Expanding upon contemporary understandings of the rights and duties of citizens, the volume presents anthropological investigations of the sensory aspects of participation in collectivities such as face-to-face communities, ethnic groups, nations and transnational entities. Rethinking relationships between ideology, aesthetics, affect and bodily experience, the authors reveal the multiple political effects of the senses. The book demonstrates how various elements of political life, including some of the most fundamental aspects of citizenship, rest not only upon our senses, but on their perceived naturalization. Vivid ethnographic examples of sensory citizenship in Europe, the United States, the Pacific, Asia and the Middle East explore themes such as sight in political constructions; smell and ethnic conflict; pain in the constitution of communities; national soundscapes; taste in national identities; movement, memory and emplacement.

chapter 1|32 pages

Introduction

Senses and Citizenships

chapter 2|22 pages

Visibly Black

Phenotype and Cosmopolitan Aspirations on Simbo, Western Solomon Islands

chapter 3|24 pages

Blood, Toil, and Tears

Rhetorics of Pain and Suffering in African American and Indo-Fijian Citizenship Claims

chapter 4|20 pages

Movement in Time

Choreographies of Confinement in an Inpatient Ward

chapter 5|21 pages

Modern Citizens, Modern Food

Taste and the Rise of the Moroccan Citizen-Consumer

chapter 6|16 pages

Smelling the Difference

The Senses in Ethnic Conflict in West Kalimantan, Indonesia

chapter 7|23 pages

Gender, Nationalism, and Sound

Outgrowing “Mother India”

chapter 8|19 pages

Embodied Perception and the Invention of the Citizen

Javanese Dance in the Indonesian State

chapter 9|22 pages

Off the Edge of Europe

Border Regimes, Visual Culture, and the Politics of Race

chapter 10|21 pages

Seeing Health like a Colonial State

Pacific Island Assistant Physicians, Sight, and Nascent Biomedical Citizenship in the New Hebrides

chapter 11|21 pages

Painful Exclusion

Hepatitis C in the New Zealand Hemophilia Community

chapter 13|13 pages

The Look

An Afterword