|
Israel
Pastrana
History, Political Science
Daniel
Pope , Mentor
Rhetoric, Governmentality, and the Construction of “Illegal”
Immigrants in the Post-social State
Jonathan Inda argues that disillusionment with the welfare state
by a variety of political forces has led to the development of the
post-social state, one that seeks to govern by means of “managing
the choices of the citizen.” (cite forthcoming) For Inda,
the proliferating discourses on immigration construct “illegal
immigrants” as unable to fulfill the responsibilities of citizenship
and as threats to the social body. Grounded in the work of Foucault
and other governmentality scholars, this paper examines the current
wave of anti-immigrant discourses, locating them within the post-social
state as instruments of governmentality. Also, this paper explores
previous examples of anti-immigrant discourses, in particular those
surrounding California’s Save Our State initiative, to examine
the ways in which the rhetorical shifts of anti-immigration advocates
reflect changes in the post-911 exercise of governmentality. An
analysis of these discourses demonstrates that the rhetoric used
by anti-immigrant advocates portrays illegal immigrants as unethical
subjects representing a physical danger to the social body, upholding
gendered, racialized, and criminalized representations of immigrants.
|