Full metadata
Title
Guantánamo: The Amen Temple of Empire
Description
Guantánamo: The Amen Temple of Empire connects the fetishization of the trauma of nine/eleven with the co-constitution of subjects at Guantánamo—that of the contained Muslim terrorist prisoner silhouetted against the ideal nationalistic military body—circulated as ‘afterimages’ that carry ideological narratives about U.S. Empire. These narratives in turn religiously and racially charge the new normative practices of the security state and its historically haunted symbolic order. As individuals with complex subjectivities, the prisoners and guards are, of course, not reducible to the standardizing imprimatur of the state or its narratives. Despite the circulation of these ‘afterimages’ as fixed currency, the prisoners and guards produce their own metanarratives, through their para-ethnographic accounts of containment and of self. From within the panopticon of the prison, they seek sight lines, and gaze back at the state. This dissertation is thus a meditation on US militarism, violence, torture, race, and carceral practices, revealed thematically through metaphors of hungry ghosts, nature, journey and death, liminality, time, space, community, and salvage. Based on a multi-sited, empirical and imaginary ethnography, as well as textual and discourse analysis, I draw on the writing and testimony of prisoners, and military and intelligence personnel, whom I consider insightful para-ethnographers of the haunting valence of this fetishized historical event.
Date Created
2018
Contributors
- Coleman, Diana (Diana Murtaugh) (Author)
- Talebi, Shahla (Thesis advisor)
- Matustik, Martin (Committee member)
- Fessenden, Tracy (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
Resource Type
Extent
vii, 303 pages : illustrations (chiefly color)
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.49252
Statement of Responsibility
by Diana Coleman
Description Source
Viewed on October 22, 2019
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2018
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 267-303)
Field of study: Religious Studies
System Created
- 2018-06-01 08:06:00
System Modified
- 2021-08-26 09:47:01
- 3 years 2 months ago
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