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Contents

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2023

Inés Valdez
Affiliation:
The Johns Hopkins University, Maryland

Summary

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Type
Chapter
Information
Democracy and Empire
Labor, Nature, and the Reproduction of Capitalism
, pp. vii - viii
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Contents

  1. List of Figures

  2. Acknowledgments

  3. Introduction

    1. Democracy, Domination, and Transnationalism

    2. Theorizing the Material Inside/Outside of Popular Sovereignty

    3. Articulated Racial Regimes and Imperial Popular Sovereignty

    4. Migration, Nature, and Racial Capitalism

    5. Chapter Overview

  4. Part IImperial Popular Sovereignty

    1. 1Empire, Popular Sovereignty, and the Problem of Self-and-Other-Determination

      1. 1.1Popular Sovereignty, Self-Determination, and Empire

      2. 1.2Du Bois, Democratic Despotism, and Labor Politics

      3. 1.3Self-and-Other-Determination

      4. 1.4Excess and the Question of Self-Determination in Postcolonial Times

      5. 1.5Self-Determination: From Lack to Excess, from Settler to Deterritorialized Domination

    2. 2Socialism and Empire: Labor Mobility, Popular Sovereignty, and the Genesis of Racial Regimes

      1. 2.1Method, Migration, and Mobility within Empire

      2. 2.2Racial Capitalism and Mobility within Empire

      3. 2.3Empire, Settlement, and the People

      4. 2.4Critical Theory, Migration, and the Question of Empire

  5. Part IIReproduction Through Popular Rule Of Labor/Nature

    1. 3The Brown Family and Social Reproduction in US Capitalism

      1. 3.1Social Reproduction: From Gender to Race, from Women to Families

      2. 3.2Settlers, Guests, and Migrants

      3. 3.3The Brown Family, Social Reproduction, and Immigration Enforcement

      4. 3.4Racial Capitalism and the 2018 Crisis of Family Separations

    2. 4Techno-Racism, Manual Labor, and Du Bois’s Ecological Critique

      1. 4.1Alienation: How and From What?

      2. 4.2Land with Labor

      3. 4.3Imperialism and the Destruction of the Natural Economy

      4. 4.4Nature, Technology, and Racial Oppression

      5. 4.5Popular Sovereignty, Racial Capitalism, and Ecology

  6. Part IIIAnti-Imperial Popular Sovereignty

    1. 5Anti-Imperial Popular Sovereignty and the Politics of Transnational Solidarity

      1. 5.1The Domestic–Global Nexus

      2. 5.2Political Worldliness as Anti-Imperial Popular Sovereignty

      3. 5.3Self-Definition, Transnational Solidarity, and Emancipation from Symbiotic Elites

      4. 5.4An Empire of Oligarchs

    2. Conclusion: Empire, Settler Colonialism, and Grounded Solidarities

      1. Ecological Popular Sovereignty and the Undoing of Its Imperial Avatar

  7. Bibliography

  8. Index

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  • Contents
  • Inés Valdez, The Johns Hopkins University, Maryland
  • Book: Democracy and Empire
  • Online publication: 24 August 2023
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  • Contents
  • Inés Valdez, The Johns Hopkins University, Maryland
  • Book: Democracy and Empire
  • Online publication: 24 August 2023
Available formats
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Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Contents
  • Inés Valdez, The Johns Hopkins University, Maryland
  • Book: Democracy and Empire
  • Online publication: 24 August 2023
Available formats
×