Monday, November 16, 2015

Social Death 1+2

Lisa Marie Cachos book Social death is a response to the the system of racialized rightlessness. She expands on issues related to vulnerability and criminality, but from different disciplines, like sociology, criminology, race, media. She crosses all these disciplines already in her foreword, when she describes the medial representation of the similar actions affected victims took after the hurricane Katrina. The dichotomy „how human value is made intelligible through racialized, sexualized, spatialized, and state- sanctioned violences (4).
The first chapter discusses the incident of six white Californian teenagers, attacking four Mexican migrant workers. Interesting is the connection of legality and illegality dichotomy with race. The migrants are observed isolated from personhood, their status is perceived as an offense itself, and the crime is therefore deserved. She also analyses the gang dynamic. It is interesting because the double standard of the law is subject here. One can remain subject to it, but be excluded from protection.
It made me think about the hate crime law, which for example was invented to protect marginalized groups in particular, which nevertheless, at the same, still time measures crimes in relation to the affected body.
In Chapter two, Cacho presents the case of Kim Ho Ma. The Cambodian refugee was subject to deportation, after being pronounced guilty of murder. The meaning of freedom is especially challenged in this chapter. As a refugee Ma became stateless status, and could not be deported. His refugee status made him automatically a noncitizen. This means that there is actually no freedom for refugees like Ma, if misconduct is immediately punished with deportation. It seems like these groups are just in the States for a permanent tryout.
Chapter three and four were especially interesting to me, after the recent attacks in Paris, as well as the episode of the Dreamers we watched in class. Cacho describes American media representations of Muslims after the 9/11 attacks. Again citizenship and personhood are facing one another. Personhood is not something naturally given. It seems like it is exclusive to certain groups of people, for everybody else it rather has to be earned.
In chapter four Cacho describes the case of an illegal migrant worker, Elvira Arellano. She is illegally in the US, whereas her child is an American citizen. The chapter does again present also media, which chooses a certain way to represent. In this case African American and undocumented migrants are standing across from each, which in the end leaves the white majority undisturbed exploitation.
The last chapter deals with the death of the authors cousin, in a drunk-driving accident.
Cacho discusses the racialization in the US. The legal system treats based on race, dependent on their status as well.
moreover, her case studies are just examples that could be found in any other ‘western’- country in the world. The refugees arriving in Europe just now will just go through this process and will probably face similar devaluations. And especially after the attacks in Paris some political fights, will be fought on the refugees back. Already now, refugees become the scapegoats for the terror, the already difficult process of entering Europe is subject to be debated. At the same time, the burning of one of the refugee camps in France, was barely covered by media. Although nobody got hurt, this event would have emphasized the victim position of the refugees. Furthermore, the worldwide reactions to this attack show one more time how bodies value is differentiated. Cacho encourages with her contribution on racialization for the reader to move beyond the systems, she “centers the responsibility to reckon with those deemed dangerous, undeserving, and unintelligible“ (168).

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Social Death Part 2

This week's reading was interesting for me, especially because it started with the after-effects of September 11. Having lived in New York this summer, I visited the museum multiple times, as well as the new One World Trade Center and Ground Zero. Interestingly enough, I could see how the descriptors of the terrorists through transcripts and other evidence clearly matched Cacho's descriptors: "gang members ('people who strike and hide'), undocumented immigrants ('people who know no borders'), the disabled or mentally ill ('people who depend upon others'), and their allies ('people who harbor them and finance them and feed them')." Also interesting is the effects of 9/11 particularly on people of the Muslim faith and people who choose to veil. It's strange to see the immediate after-effects of an event that seemed to have happen not long ago. People who do not look like the American were/possibly still are labeled the Other, the non-citizen, constantly weaving their American identity into their story in order to compensate for not looking the part of a white American. "Because terrorism in the United States was associated with Islam and signified by both Arab/Muslim bodies and nations in the Middle East following as well as predating 9/11, being suspected of terrorism because of one's race, ethnicity, and/or religion became a de facto status crime that could be enforced through immigration law and justified through the ascription of illegality." Cacho also points out that in order to mask the clear racism in the War on Terror, the national identity post-9/11 took a form of diverse, multiracial Americans, going as far as the military. Not only did the U.S. go outside its border to recruit, but it also recruited heavily in particular areas — areas with heavy representation of People of Color. While it looked/looks like the U.S. military is attempting to diversify its ranks, in all actuality, the U.S. military recruited certain populations that were considered disposable in the first place, i.e. Latino/a and Black populations. Because the U.S. recruited outside the U.S., many of the soldiers were "undocumented" "non-citizens." Yet, the U.S. did not give them the label "American citizen" until after death.

In using Cachos argument to look at Black Lives Matter, Brown Lives Matter and All Lives Matter, I think Cacho would find all three somewhat problematic. Black/Brown Lives Matter attempt to document citizenship for People of Color, yet who all is included in Black/Brown Lives? Even though Black Lives Matter was actually started by three Black women, the movement is largely represented by Black men. All Lives Matter, however, is not as all-inclusive as it seems. Are women included in All Lives Matter? Are all races and ethnicities included, or is All Lives Matter just a cover up to silence Black Lives Matter and Brown Lives Matter? Most likely closest to Cachos argument would be, do undocumented, non-citizens lives matter? Black and Brown Lives Matter do a better job than All Lives Matter are revealing the inconsistencies in this hegemonic culture. But I still believe Cacho would argue with Black/Brown Lives Matter because it attempts to humanize these American citizens.

Social Death Part 2

            The new movements in response to police brutality are numerous things to different people. Depending upon positionality to the situation, people find some movements more relevant or fairer than others. Placing Cacho in conversation with these movements is interesting for various reasons. Each movement has it’s own specific target with it’s own political agenda.
            “All Lives Matter” is known as the counter movement to “Black Lives Matter,” but some view ALM as a more inclusive movement. Personally, I think ALM is another way for people to justify saying that black people whine too much about the situations somehow find themselves. ALM is the majority response to BLM. I think Cacho would place ALM as a form of white entitlement because they are under the illusion that all bodies are treated equally under the law. Their thoughts that ALM is the answer better serves to prove that the people involved in that movement do not understand their privileges, and don’t understand reasoning for the BLM movement. While it can be said that ALM is not exactly the group that Cacho would advocate for, I don’t think the other movements are the answer either.
            “Black and Brown Lives Matter” both have agendas that are meant to help people of color, but they do it at each other’s expense. While there should be light shed on these issues respectively, both of these movements are vying for attention in the mainstream. Cacho notes how bodies of color have to fight among themselves to gain attention from the group in power. They subvert the power of other minority groups so they can get a chance to change their status – which I cannot blame them for. Who wants to be at the bottom of the power totem pole? BLM and BLM have wonderful intentions as political activist groups, but they are playing into the hands of those in power because they are undermining each other for attention. Both of these movements seem more like the oppression Olympics than a real activist movements, both are still trying to get attention from the mainstream by calling on the shortcoming or lack of inclusivity of the other group.

            I think Cacho would call these movements a response to the power dynamic, and a genuine attempt at social change. However, these movements are using tactics that don’t serve all bodies of color because they are still attempting to place value on bodies as more valuable than others. For the other there is still an Other that they can place underneath them, which does not solve the problems that these movements want it places them in the position to affect another body of color. The answer to these groups problems is not the ALM movement – since it doesn’t address anything other than reinforcing white denial and power.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Social Death, Pt. 2

This week's readings, the closing half of Lisa Marie Cacho's Social Death: Racialized Rightlessness and the Criminalization of the Unprotected, continues in many ways some of our discussions from last week, which centered around the idea of "social death" and the permanent(ly) unmournable criminalized. However, for a number of reasons, Cacho pulls us out of abstraction so that we might grapple more completely with the material effects of criminalization–rather than social death being a "killing abstraction"..."it becomes the premise and precondition for actual death" (98). In her discussion of the "War on Terrorism," Cacho examines the ways in which this permanent class of "non-citizen" is created through a mesh of intricate signifiers that denote who belongs; who does not belong; who deserves understanding and compassion; who does not deserve understanding and compassion. As Cacho reminds us: "The 'illegal alien' is the signifier, which should concern us because it signifies persons fundamentally unentitled to rights, and it refers to a category of nonpersonhood that institutes discrimination" (113). This is an important juncture in our theorizations and discussions about not only this work, but the work of transnational projects more broadly because they force (perhaps in a more nuanced way, coerce) us to contend with our own necessity for a "racialized/criminalized Other" against whom we are able to measure our own appropriateness as citizens, as law abiders, as capitalists, as human beings. Cacho must likewise contend with this very proposal in the conclusion via the death of her cousin. In this chapter she states, "On some level, the violence of Brandon's death was perversely and disconcertingly a source of value for us because it valorized the life choices that each of us made but he did not. It naturalized how and why he died while simultaneously reaffirming our social worth and societal value. His violent death validated the rightness of our choices and the righteousness of our behaviors, thereby illustrating Barrett's insight that 'relativities of value [are] ratios of violence.'" (149). Moreso, Cacho necessitates an examination of how/why the choices that we have made "to become valuable members of society validated U.S. society's exclusionary methods for assigning social value" and therefore our own immersion within the complex web of neoliberal ideologies that we seek to critique–constantly reminding us that we are not able to escape yet this is no reason to be complicit.

In thinking more generally about the application of Cacho's work onto discussions of the #BlackLivesMatter movement–including its subsequent and causal iterations #AllLivesMatter and #BrownLivesMatter–there is a necessity in examining, however partially, the role of valuation in our considerations about who, literally, matters and who does not. Cacho would certainly be critical of the tendencies in #BlackLivesMatter to focus on the lives of Black men, which has the unfortunate implication of rendering women of color, at least unintentionally, illegible or unimportant. Yet, I also think that #BlackLivesMatter and #BrownLivesMatter seek to push against a hegemonic (White) desire to maintain the status quo within our neoliberal capitalist culture in a way that Cacho very much articulates. #AllLivesMatter, on the other hand, is an exercise by the White hegemony to silence the calls for justice that are being made by People of Color in response to the state sanctioned violences that are taking place against them, both in immigrant communities and in "criminalized" neighborhoods around the country. The main thing that I see as being important in communicating between the #BlackLivesMatter/#BrownLivesMatter movements and Cacho is the insistence upon highlighting the inconsistencies between the neoliberal (homophobic, racist, classist) ideologies of the State, which is perennially seeking to maintain an unconscious/silenced group by whom appropriate humanity can be measured, and the material violences that are a result of those ideologies. I see them as being fundamentally important to the task that Cacho has taken up; though highlighting or rendering these practices evident may not seem important to their end, it is inarticulably necessary and, I would argue, essential for them to be revealed, which is, in itself, an ostensible impossibility. Thus, this work works in the interstices between what is believed to be possible and what is necessary. Perhaps someone else can articulate this better than I...

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

social Death Pt 1

Overall i really have enjoyed Cacho's very important book which analysis "how race and space are imagined" thus it " governs how neighborhoods of color and their residents will be managed". Immediately began to compare Cacho work with Michelle Alexanders important work which analyzes the criminalization of african american communities. And i think something very important we may discuss in class today is in what ways can criminalized populations resist a  system that is nothing more than a system of social control for bodies that are casted as "other:" than white?

What i appreciated about Cachos work is her dedication to analyze how bodies of color have been criminalized and and as a result stand outside the protection of the law, but not necessarily excluded from the law.  Cacho argues that "criminalized populations and the places where they live form the foundation of the U.S. legal system, imagined to be the reason why a punitive (in)justice system exists". and lastly I was very intrigued by Cachos argument of "unfamiliarized" those narratives that continue to disempower those who have been marginalized.

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Social Death Part 1

            The stereotyping of certain people are trickle down effects from the representation of other groups of people. Cacho echoed Ulysse in some respect; they both understand that certain representations of people become their only identity.  Cacho’s discussion on the representation of Hurricane Katrina victims is similar to the experiences that Haitian earthquake victims suffer. Hurricane Katrina victims were not given proper medical care or basic supplies because of concerns for safety, similar to hot areas during the Haitian earthquake. It was clear, based on who received aid, whose bodies were found to be more valuable therefore worth saving. In the case of New Orleans, the people should have been worth saving, at least to some of the public, because they were not refugees, but U.S. citizens.
            Cacho grappled with notions of citizenship in a very interesting way. Instead of the simple what makes a citizen a citizen, Cacho shed light on which citizens are valued more. The citizen has a monetary value placed on their rescue, so are they worth saving if they are on considered to be less than worthy citizens? What makes a worthy citizen? It seems in the course of natural disasters that the only citizens not worth saving have color and are poor. People who are the victims of government’s misconducts are usually the people who are too disadvantaged to combat or correct the situation.
            Governmental claims to aid people and be an equal force of justice for all are proven false by constant reformation of policies and responses to major crises. Governmental reforms of immigration still leave someone unprotected. The immigration process is tedious and meant to keep out “others” because of nationalistic, liberalist ideals that reinforce the notion that all immigrants are thieves that are robbing the country dry. These laws are intimate ways to keep certain bodies governed within the law while simultaneously keeping them on the outside unable to reap any benefits. As Cohen points out, the immigrants aren’t able to receive any of the benefits their taxes pay for, although the common representation is they don’t pay taxes.

            Cacho reaffirms Ulysse’s notion that representations in the media can become attached to bodies as a singular identity. These singular representations or association of people of color, especially black people, with evil, dangerous and/or sinister themes serves to reinforce the capitalistic ideals that require someone to be placed at the bottom, as the undesirable or other, so that the top can continue to be.  

Social Death, week 1

“If acting ‘normal’ is symptomatic of sociopathology as a ‘condition,’ how would one ever demonstrate reform or rehabilitation?” (Cacho, 72).
For there to be a demonstration of reform and rehabilitation there would need to be the opportunity given for that demonstration, and it does not seem too bleak or harsh to claim that that opportunity is denied to people of color both within the legal system and outside of it in the U.S. Beyond that lack of opportunity, there is no desire for that opportunity to be given. Intrinsic within basic systems of evaluation, like psychology and other such practices that seek to get at the ‘heart’ of the human experience, are criteria that implicates those who do not fit within neoliberalist standards as being morally deficient and socially disabled (Cacho, 92). As seen in the psych evaluation of Ma, the refusal to comply with ‘normal’ expressions of guilt and acceptance of 'guilt' are incriminations in and of themselves that denote an overall defect in the accused. How is it even possible for a person to show that they ‘have value’ when they are assumed to be incapable of value from the start?
De facto status crimes are defined by Cacho as “specific activities that are only transparently recognized as ‘criminal’ when they are attached to statuses that invoke race (gang member), ethnicity (“illegal alien”), and/or national origin (suspected terrorist)” (Cacho, 43). This concept of transferable meaning in many ways invokes the ideas set out by Sara Ahmed about hate being a transferable commodity. Though there is nothing intrinsically criminal in bodies of color, bodies of color are seen to be sites of criminality. Bodies of color that cross into the U.S. are told from the beginning that they are of less value, from the random screenings at airports to the ‘alien’ label they receive upon entrance.
If ever there were to be an example of cognitive dissonance, it would be in how the U.S. claims to be the land of the freedom while having the highest levels of incarceration in the world.