Toward a Sociology of the Trace
Questions national identity by investigating the creation of memory and meaning
328 Pages, 6 x 9 in
- Paperback
- 9780816655984
- Published: July 28, 2010
Details
Toward a Sociology of the Trace
ISBN: 9780816655984
Publication date: July 28th, 2010
328 Pages
8 x 5
The contributors utilize empirically based studies of social policy, political economy, and social institutions to offer a new way of looking at the creation of meaning, representation, and memory. They scrutinize subjects such as narratives in the U.S. coal industry's change from digging mines to removing mountaintops; war-related redress policies in post-World War II Japan; views of masculinity linked to tequila, Pancho Villa, and the Mexican Revolution; and the politics of subjectivity in 1970s political violence in Thailand.
Contributors: Sarah Banet-Weiser, U of Southern California; Barbara A. Barnes, U of California, Berkeley; Marie Sarita Gaytán; Avery F. Gordon, U of California, Santa Barbara; Tanya McNeill, U of California, Santa Cruz; Sudarat Musikawong, Willamette U; Akiko Naono, U of Kyushu; Rebecca R. Scott, U of Missouri.
Macarena Gómez-Barris is assistant professor of sociology and American studies and ethnicity at the University of Southern California.
Prologue: Traces in the Social World
Macarena Gómez-Barris and Herman Gray
1. Toward a Sociology of the Trace
Macarena Gómez-Barris and Herman Gray
Part I. Cartographies of Belonging
2. The Prisoner's Curse
Avery F. Gordon
3. A Nation of Families: The Codification and (Be)longings of Heteropatriarchy
Tanya McNeill
4. Culture, Masculinity, and the Time after Race
Herman Gray
5. Producing Sacrificial Subjects for the Nation: Japan's War-related Redress Policy and the Endurance Doctrine
Akiko Naono
Part II. Spectacles of Consumption
6. Coal Heritage/Coal History: Progress, Tourism, and Mountaintop Removal
Rebecca R. Scott
7. Ecoadventures in the American West: Innocence, Conflict, and Nation Making in Emptied Landscapes
Barbara A. Barnes
Part III. Managing and Reconciling Memory
8. Drinking the Nation and Making Masculinity: Tequila, the Revolution, and Mexican Identity
Marie Sarita Gaytán
9. Reinscribing Memory through the Other 9/11
Macarena Gómez-Barris
10. Between Celebration and Mourning: Political Violence in Thailand in the 1970s
Sudarat Musikawong
Afterword: Traces in Social Worlds
Sarah Banet-Weiser
Contributors
Index