ABSTRACT

Americans think of their country as a welcoming place where everyone has equal opportunity. Yet historical baggage and anxious times can restrain these possibilities. Newcomers often find that civic belonging comes with strings attached––riddled with limitations or legally punitive rites of passage. For those already here, new challenges to civic belonging emerge on the basis of belief, behavior, or heritage. This book uses the term "elsewhere" in describing conditions that exile so many citizens to "some other place" through prejudice, competition, or discordant belief. Yet, in another way, "elsewhere" evokes an undefined "not yet" ripe with potential. In the face of America’s daunting challenges, can "elsewhere" point to optimism, hope, and common purpose?

Through 12 detailed chapters, the book applies critical theory in the humanities and social sciences to examine recurring crises of social inclusion in the U.S. After two centuries of incremental "progress" in securing human dignity, today the U.S. finds itself torn by new conflicts over reproductive rights, immigration, health care, religious extremism, sexual orientation, mental illness, and fear of terrorists. Is there a way of explaining this recurring tendency of Americans to turn against each other? Elsewhere in America engages these questions, charting the ever-changing faces of difference (manifest in contested landscapes of sex and race to such areas as disability and mental health), their spectral and intersectional character (recent discourses on performativity, normativity, and queer theory), and the grounds on which categories are manifest in ideation and movement politics (metapolitics, cosmopolitanism, dismodernism).

chapter |6 pages

Belonging Where?

Introduction

part |4 pages

Belonging There

chapter |19 pages

Makers-and-Takers

When More is Not Enough

chapter |25 pages

True Believers

Spiritual Life in a Secular Age

chapter |17 pages

Ordinary People

The Normal and the Pathological

chapter |22 pages

Homeland Insecurities

Expecting the Worst

part |4 pages

Belonging Somewhere

chapter |22 pages

Reality Is Broken

Neoliberalism and the Virtual Economy

chapter |30 pages

Mistaken Identities

From Color Blindness to Gender Bending

chapter |25 pages

No Body is Perfect

Disability in a Posthuman Age

chapter |24 pages

On the Spectrum

America's Mental Health Disorder

part |4 pages

Belonging Elsewhere

chapter |25 pages

Gaming the System

Competition and Its Discontents

chapter |31 pages

To Affinity and Beyond

The Cyborg and the Cosmopolitan

chapter |27 pages

Medicating the Problem

America's New Pharmakon

chapter |13 pages

The One and the Many

The Ethics of Uncertainty