Sunera ThobaniSyndicate content

Sunera Thobani teaches Women's Studies at the University of British Columbia.
in her own words

Race, torture and the curious case of Obama’s myopia

Where does the question of race figure in President Obama’s political calculations, for surely he cannot be ignorant of the historical relationship between race and torture in the American experience? 

The tortured body has long been the site for the most spectacular display of the politics of race: the utter violation and dehumanization of black and other bodies of colour has been central to the colonial and imperialist expansion of American and European powers.

Amidst the media fanfare that marked the Obama Administration’s first 100 days in office, the five-year anniversary of the release of the Abu-Ghraib photographs by the CBS went largely unmarked. 

embedded_video

rabble news

Desperately seeking Obama

The New Year has begun with Muslims around the world being taught a lesson in the crudity of racial equations: 400 Palestinian lives equal four Israeli lives.


Reeling from having learnt that over a million Iraqi and Afghan lives equal 3,000 American lives, the logic of this racial mathematics is certainly no new thing. After all, the first U.S. Constitution engaged in just such calculations of human worth, and Katrina demonstrated their ongoing effects. But the lesson has the power to shock every time: the images of Palestinian bodies being pulled out of the rubble in Gaza that flood news reports are unbearable to witness.

embedded_video

in her own words

President Obama: Change the world can believe in?

As the widely anticipated election of Barack Obama to the Presidency of the United States grows closer, the priorities that will shape the early days of his Administration require critical attention.

With the banking system still in crisis and financial markets on a volatile rollercoaster, the pressure will be great for a President Obama to focus on domestic issues. But the new Administration will also be saddled with the increasingly unpopular War on Terror. How will Obama deliver on his promise of change to Americans, as well as those around the world who have greeted his candidacy with such enthusiasm?

embedded_video

in her own words

President Obama: Change the world can believe in?

As the widely anticipated election of Barack Obama to the Presidency of the United States grows closer, the priorities that will shape the early days of his Administration require critical attention.

With the banking system still in crisis and financial markets on a volatile rollercoaster, the pressure will be great for a President Obama to focus on domestic issues. But the new Administration will also be saddled with the increasingly unpopular War on Terror. How will Obama deliver on his promise of change to Americans, as well as those around the world who have greeted his candidacy with such enthusiasm?

embedded_video

War Frenzy

Introduction | On American Foreign Policy | Invoking the American Nation | The Politics of Liberating Women | Closing Words

Introduction

My recent speech at a women’s conference on violence against women has generated much controversy. In the aftermath of the terrible attacks of September 11, I argued that the U.S.

embedded_video

excerpt

Racializing the 'enemy'

 Exalted Subjects: Studies in the Making of Race and Nation in Canada

Exalted Subjects: Studies in the Making of Race and Nation in Canada

by Sunera Thobani
( University of Toronto Press,
2007;
$35.00)

If the civilizational narratives that frame the war on terror promote a racial solidarity within the west then this bonding relies primarily on its racial coding of the enemy as non-western. With this narrative's representation of Islam as the quintessential Other of the west, the category Muslim has been constituted in this war as not only religious and political but also as a racialized category.

This omnipresent enemy is defined in numerous ways that depict it as monstrous. The enemy has been described a: 'a terrorist underworld — including groups like Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad, Jaish-I-Mohammed — it operates in remote jungles and deserts, and hides in the centers of large cities.

embedded_video

Syndicate content