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May's "Conversations on South Asia" event will feature Shenila Khoja-Moolji and "Sovereign Attachments: Masculinity, Muslimness, and Affective Politics in Pakistan."
From the publisher's website:
"Sovereign Attachments rethinks sovereignty by moving it out of the exclusive domain of geopolitics and legality and into cultural, religious, and gender studies. Through a close reading of a stunning array of cultural texts produced by the Pakistani state and the Pakistan-based Taliban, Shenila Khoja-Moolji theorizes sovereignty as an ongoing attachment that is negotiated in public culture. Both the state and the Taliban recruit publics into relationships of trust, protection, and fraternity by summoning models of Islamic masculinity, mobilizing kinship metaphors, and marshalling affect. In particular, masculinity and Muslimness emerge as salient performances through which sovereign attachments are harnessed. The book shifts the discussion of sovereignty away from questions about absolute dominance to ones about shared repertoires, entanglements, and co-constitution."
Marya Hannun (Georgetown University) and Zahra Ayubi (Dartmouth College) will be joining the author for this conversation. Elizabeth Lhost (Dartmouth College) will moderate.
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The "Conversations on South Asia" series is sponsored by the Bodas Family Academic Programming Fund, the Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages Program, and the Department of History at Dartmouth College.
All are welcome.
Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.