
Contents
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Introduction: Sovereignty and the Racialized Body Introduction: Sovereignty and the Racialized Body
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9/11 and the Detention/Deportation Regime 9/11 and the Detention/Deportation Regime
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Carceral Violence and Racial Terror Carceral Violence and Racial Terror
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Racializing the Diasporic Muslim Body Racializing the Diasporic Muslim Body
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Conclusion: Sovereign Terror and the Necropolitics of Migration Conclusion: Sovereign Terror and the Necropolitics of Migration
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Notes Notes
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Bibliography Bibliography
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13 Tracing the Muslim Body: Race, U.S. Deportation, and Pakistani Return Migration
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Published:July 2013
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Abstract
This chapter examines the impact of the “War on Terror” on working-class Pakistani migrants in New York. Focusing on the thousands of “voluntary” return migrants, the chapter explores how racial disciplining and boundary making are produced through racial violence and everyday forms of policing to control transnational practices of migration. Central to this discussion are the concepts of racism and sovereign power that are enacted through state and/or extralegal practices. After 9/11, notions of xenophobic racism, imperialism, and histories of transnational migration are encapsulated in the process of racialization that makes the Muslim body visible for the purposes of containment and disappearance through detention, deportation, and return migration. This process is based on a flexible theory of the race-concept that incorporates Islam and Muslims through a combination of social, cultural, religious, and biological difference. This chapter considers returnee narratives that describe social disciplining and the production of racial affect in relation to the racial uniform through everyday practices and the reinscription of the imperial state.
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