Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Series Editors’ Preface: Interpretive Lenses in Sociology—On the Multidimensional Foundations of Meaning in Social Life
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Between Meaning and Matter
- 1 Toward a Strong Cultural Sociology of the Body and Embodiment
- 2 Thinking the Molecular
- 3 Interpreting Africa's Seselelãme: Bodily Ways of Knowing in a Globalized World
- 4 Gender on the Post-Colony: Phenomenology, Race, and the Body in Nervous Conditions
- 5 Reinterpreting Male Bodies and Health in Crisis Times: From “Obesity” to Bigger Matters
- 6 Beauty, Breasts, and Meaning after Mastectomy
- 7 “You Are Not the Body”: (Re)Interpreting the Body in and through Integral Yoga
- 8 Black Girls’ Bodies and Belonging in the Classroom
- 9 Embodied Vulnerability and Sensemaking with Solidarity Activists
- 10 Our Bodies, Our Disciplines, Our Selves
- Index
9 - Embodied Vulnerability and Sensemaking with Solidarity Activists
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Series Editors’ Preface: Interpretive Lenses in Sociology—On the Multidimensional Foundations of Meaning in Social Life
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Between Meaning and Matter
- 1 Toward a Strong Cultural Sociology of the Body and Embodiment
- 2 Thinking the Molecular
- 3 Interpreting Africa's Seselelãme: Bodily Ways of Knowing in a Globalized World
- 4 Gender on the Post-Colony: Phenomenology, Race, and the Body in Nervous Conditions
- 5 Reinterpreting Male Bodies and Health in Crisis Times: From “Obesity” to Bigger Matters
- 6 Beauty, Breasts, and Meaning after Mastectomy
- 7 “You Are Not the Body”: (Re)Interpreting the Body in and through Integral Yoga
- 8 Black Girls’ Bodies and Belonging in the Classroom
- 9 Embodied Vulnerability and Sensemaking with Solidarity Activists
- 10 Our Bodies, Our Disciplines, Our Selves
- Index
Summary
I sit down to write about the embodiment of solidarity activism during the early days of the 2020 coronavirus pandemic. I work from home because the university campus where I work has recently closed, the vast majority of our students sent home for the semester. My toddler squeals in the background; daycares and schools have been shuttered. State leaders beg for more medical infrastructure, and public health experts attempt to explain the rationale for what some are terming “the new normal.” For many of us living comfortable lives in the Global North, the human body, with all of its vitality and vulnerability, has not in our lifetimes seemed so central to matters political, social, ethical, and epistemological. Nor, perhaps, has our interdependence as a global community ever been so stark.
For nearly a decade, I have been studying, and at points collaborating with, a cohort of activists whose work foregrounds this fundamental interdependence as well as the shared, if unequally allotted, vulnerability of the human body. These predominately white, middle-class activists from the Christian Left protest the racialized violence of US security policies against Latinx migrants, Muslim detainees, and workers in the Global South. These groups include: (1) School of the Americas Watch, which endeavors to close the military training facility at Fort Benning, Georgia; (2) the Migrant Trail Walk, part of the US/Mexico border justice movement; and (3) Witness Against Torture, a grassroots effort to close the Guantánamo Prison. Through “observant participation” (Vargas, 2006), interviews, and archival analysis, I explore how these groups engage in embodied practices of solidarity with the state's targets while contesting US policies of militarism, torture, indefinite detention, and immigration enforcement (Russo, 2018).
Through a political practice I term solidarity witnessing, these activists work to see violence that dominant perspectives occlude and then reveal such violence to broader audiences. Physically demanding and sometimes high-risk tactics, such as fasting, desert pilgrimage, and civil disobedience, play a central role in these groups’ practices of solidarity, allowing them to draw attention to state violence while forging community and long-term commitment to a cause. Their bodily practices of solidarity, intended to generate moral outrage among their audiences, also spur a range of powerful embodied feelings of solidarity, including a sense of close community among activists, deep empathy with the state's targets, and renewed commitment to a struggle for justice.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Interpreting the BodyBetween Meaning and Matter, pp. 202 - 222Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2023