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OverviewA critical account of how academia and global capital appropriated therevolutionary fervor of the 1960s and 1970s. Roderick A. Ferguson traces and assesses the ways in which the rise of interdisciplines-departments of race, gender, and ethnicity; fields such as queer studies-were not simply a challenge to contemporary power as manifest in academia, the state, and globalcapitalism but were, rather, constitutive of it. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Roderick A. FergusonPublisher: University of Minnesota Press Imprint: University of Minnesota Press Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 21.60cm ISBN: 9780816672783ISBN 10: 0816672784 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 07 November 2012 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsContents Acknowledgments Introduction: Affirmative Actions of Power 1. The Birth of the Interdisciplines 2. The Proliferation of Minority Difference 3. The Racial Genealogy of Excellence 4. The Reproduction of Things Academic 5. Immigration and the Drama of Affirmation 6. The Golden Era of Instructed Minorities 7. Administering Sexuality, or, The Will to Institutionality Conclusion: An Alternative Currency of Difference Notes IndexReviewsEspecially now, when the rhetoric of crisis is the norm in discussions of the present and the future of the university, The Reorder of Things is urgently needed. Its persistent attention to the genealogies of minority difference--of racial formation, class divisions, and gender and sex systems--definitively establishes the academy as both a flashpoint for the crystallization of what we commonly understand to be sociopolitical issues and a major part of the machinery of history. Ferguson incisively, elegantly shows us how to think differently--how to think in and through difference--and in the process, changes the horizons of knowledge itself. --Kandice Chuh, CUNY/The Graduate Center The Reorder of Things marks a bold and necessary intervention into our understandings of how (neoliberal) hegemony works at this moment--not simply to coopt, but to contain the very difference it makes into abstraction. This is a moment of fire when we are being called upon to kindle a different kind of radical collectivity. Roderick A. Ferguson is the ancient blacksmith forging a new alchemy, which we, too, can hammer out--but only if we dare. --M. Jacqui Alexander, author of Pedagogies of Crossing: Meditations on Feminism, Sexual Politics, Memory and the Sacred Especially now, when the rhetoric of crisis is the norm in discussions of the present and the future of the university, The Reorder of Things is urgently needed. Its persistent attention to the genealogies of minority difference--of racial formation, class divisions, and gender and sex systems--definitively establishes the academy as both a flashpoint for the crystallization of what we commonly understand to be sociopolitical issues and a major part of the machinery of history. Ferguson incisively, elegantly shows us how to think differently--how to think in and through difference--and in the process, changes the horizons of knowledge itself. --Kandice Chuh, CUNY/The Graduate Center<br> Author InformationRoderick A. Ferguson is professor of race and critical theory at the University of Minnesota. He is the author of Aberrations in Black: Toward a Queer of Color Critique (Minnesota, 2003) and the coeditor of Strange Affinities: The Gender and Sexual Politics of Comparative Racialization. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |