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Media type:
E-Book
Title:
Contesting Race and Citizenship
:
Youth Politics in the Black Mediterranean
Contains:
Frontmatter
Contents
Acknowledgments
Note on Language, Terminology, and Translation
Introduction: Contested Borders in the Time of Monsters
Part 1 CITIZENSHIP
1. Italian Ethnonationalism and the Limits of Citizenship
2. Black Entrepreneurs and the “(Re)Making” of Italy
3. Mediterraneanism, Africa, and the Racial Borders of Italianness
Part 2 DIASPORIC POLITICS
4. Translation and the Lived Geographies of the Black Mediterranean
5. Refugees and Citizens-in-Waiting
Conclusion: Looking South
Coda
Methodological Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Description:
Contesting Race and Citizenship is an original study of Black politics and varieties of political mobilization in Italy. While there is extensive research on first-generation immigrants and refugees who traveled from Africa to Italy, there is little scholarship about the experiences of Black people who were born and raised in Italy. Camilla Hawthorne focuses on the ways Italians of African descent have become entangled with processes of re-defining the legal, racial, cultural, and economic boundaries of Italy and by extension, of Europe itself. Contesting Race and Citizenship opens up discussions of the so-called migrant "crisis" by focusing on a generation of Black people who, though born or raised in Italy, have been thrust into the same racist, xenophobic political climate as the immigrants and refugees who are arriving in Europe across the Mediterranean Sea from the African continent. Hawthorne traces not only mobilizations for national citizenship, but also the more capacious, transnational Black diasporic possibilities that emerge when activists confront the ethical and political limits of citizenship as a means for securing meaningful, lasting racial justice—possibilities that are centered on shared critiques of the racial state, as well as shared histories of racial capitalism and colonialism