Description
Book SynopsisInderpal Grewal traces the changing relations between the US state and its citizens in an era she calls advanced neoliberalism, under which everyday life is militarized, humanitarianism serves imperial aims, and white Christian men become exceptional citizens tasked with protecting the nation from racialized others.
Trade Review"[Grewal] expertly demonstrates how, whether via militarism or humanitarianism, with both always racialized, the exceptional citizen labors to uphold US empire and the exceptionalism that justifies and rationalizes it." -- Jennifer Kelly * Radical History Review *
"In this book, Grewal captures—through her multidisciplinary engagement with the key features of early twenty-first-century American political life—something important and troubling about the odd state of affairs in which we find ourselves here in the post-9/11 digital age. . . . This is a bold, brave, and forthright book." -- Tina Fernandes Botts * Hypatia Reviews Online *
"[This book] deserves to find its way onto the reading lists of university departments for a variety of subjects. . . a tour de force." -- Columba Achilleos-Sarll * International Feminist Journal of Politics *
"This book is a carefully crafted volume, with most impressive documentation, a critical contribution that explains the pervasiveness of the 'security mom' and its complement, a fascist near-future." -- Daniel Zirker * Australasian Journal of American Studies *
"
Saving the Security State is a fascinating, nuanced study of a topic that possesses an enormous amount of importance in contemporary society. ... Grewal’s focus on exceptional citizenship and American imperialisms at home and abroad make[s] this book exceptional." -- Joseph Michael Gratale * European Journal of American Culture *
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments ix
Introduction. Exceptional Citizens? Saving and Surveilling in Advanced Neoliberal Times 1
1. Katrina, American Exceptionalism, and the Security State 33
2. American Humanitarian Citizenship: The "Soft" Power of Empire 59
3. Muslims, Missionaries, and Humanitarians 87
4. "Security Moms" and "Security Feminists": Securitizing Family and State 118
5. Digital Natives: Threats, Technologies, Markets 144
Coda. The "Shooter" 185
Notes 205
Bibliography 261
Index 309