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On Othering: Part 3. Nature as Other: The Human and Non-human Relationship

On Othering
Part 3. Nature as Other: The Human and Non-human Relationship
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Acknowledgements
  3. Introduction
  4. Part 1. The Other Within
    1. 1. Hosting the Hostage: Hospitality, the Uyghur Other, and Chinese State-Imposed Peace
    2. 2. The Ubiquitous Other, or the Muslims of Assam: Is Peace Possible?
    3. 3. Bordering and Everyday Peace with the Other
  5. Part 2. The Marginal Other: Gender, Sexuality, and Race
    1. 4. Muslims in Italy: Rooting and Pluralism, Inequalities and Islamophobia
    2. 5. Global North Homoimperialism and the Conundrum of Queer Asylum
    3. 6. Unfree Muslims: Islamophobia and the (Im)Possibilities of Muslim Belonging in America
    4. 7. Killing Machine: How Mexican and US States of Exception Turned Revolutionaries and Migrants into Bare Life, 1969–1996
    5. 8. There Are No Signs: Feeling Black in a Post–Jim Crow America
    6. 9. Building Bridges Between Queer and Normative Muslims
  6. Part 3. Nature as Other: The Human and Non-human Relationship
    1. 10. “A Foothold in the Sheer Wall of the Future”: Extinction, Making Kin, and Imagining Peace in The Ministry of Utmost Happiness
    2. 11. The Earth as a Phobic Object: Negative Ecology and the Rise of Eco-Fascism
    3. 12. “Peace” for Indigenous Peoples: Land-Based Visions of Reconciliation
    4. Afterword: Imagining People’s Peace
  7. Contributors

Part 3 Nature as Other The Human and Non-human Relationship

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10. “A Foothold in the Sheer Wall of the Future” Extinction, Making Kin, and Imagining Peace in The Ministry of Utmost Happiness
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