Sep 30, 2024  
2024-2025 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2024-2025 Undergraduate Catalog

ANTH 303 - Abject Bodies


Prerequisite, ANTH 102  or SOC 101  or WGST 101  or HUM 205  or IES 150  or POSC 150  or PCST 160  or HLHM 100  or consent of instructor. Abjection or “the state of being cast off” resonates with communities that have been neglected, marginalized, maimed, or systematically annihilated through acts of state violence and genocide. This course will explore the feminist underpinnings of Julia Kristeva’s “abjection” and follow its broad theoretical applications within contemporary anthropological and interdisciplinary work. How is systemic violence embodied? To what extent are bodies rendered object of regulation and/or object of destruction? In what way has violence and inequality informed resistance movements and resilience? This course will ask students to consider how state power interacts with populations it deems abject and how this act of casting off is marked or memorialized upon flesh. Furthermore, the capacity for sustainable change and community-driven direct action will be assessed in-light of abjection. Case studies will center abjection, necropolitics, and state violence through highlighting cross-cultural examples of disability and ableism, anti-Blackness, fatphobia, anti-indigeneity, and queerphobia in North America and around the world. Letter grade with Pass/No Pass option. With consent, this course may be repeated for credit. (Offered every year.) 3 credits