Necro-Rhetorical Constructions of the Migrant: An Image of Death on the Border

abstract: This thesis examines the rhetorical relationship between migrant death and American culture, with an emphasis on how postmortem treatment of the deceased gives shape to anti-migrant attitudes. By isolating one instance of death on the border and considering the discourse that ensued in the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Baumann, Natalie (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57116
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-57116
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-571162020-06-02T03:01:16Z Necro-Rhetorical Constructions of the Migrant: An Image of Death on the Border abstract: This thesis examines the rhetorical relationship between migrant death and American culture, with an emphasis on how postmortem treatment of the deceased gives shape to anti-migrant attitudes. By isolating one instance of death on the border and considering the discourse that ensued in the following two months, this research assesses mechanisms of a rhetoric of death (necrorhetoric) as they relate to sociopolitical constructions of the migrant. The political apparatus of the State as a natural extension of biopower confers upon it the authority to produce sacred life or bare life (homo sacer). This process of production creates conditions of being which precede the potential to kill without allegation of murder, constructs the content of sovereign power, and results in a social sense-making, or public doxa, that informs cultural values and justifies collective attitudes. As the process is perfected, meticulous and calculated demonstrations of force become a crucial exercise of sovereignty. Efforts to enforce and maintain control of the border develop into increasingly streamlined methods, placing the state on an incremental trajectory of power that inaugurates ritualized and state sanctioned violence. The aggrieved take on a sociopolitical role that renders their lives less than fully human, allowing further alienation and segregation to occur. The desire to maintain sovereign power is the typifying force around which United States history has been shaped, and this desire continues to inform contemporary American policy. Analysis of legal, presidential, and news documents pertaining to the deaths of Oscar Martinez Ramirez and his twenty-three-month-old daughter, Valeria, reveals a network of rhetorical maneuvering that gives evidence of a necropolitical environment defined by its intentional and obscure brutality. Dissertation/Thesis Baumann, Natalie (Author) Goggin, Maureen (Advisor) Long, Elenore (Committee member) Miller, Keith (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Rhetoric Political science biopower homo sacer immigration necropolitics rhetoric eng 51 pages Masters Thesis English 2020 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57116 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Rhetoric
Political science
biopower
homo sacer
immigration
necropolitics
rhetoric
spellingShingle Rhetoric
Political science
biopower
homo sacer
immigration
necropolitics
rhetoric
Necro-Rhetorical Constructions of the Migrant: An Image of Death on the Border
description abstract: This thesis examines the rhetorical relationship between migrant death and American culture, with an emphasis on how postmortem treatment of the deceased gives shape to anti-migrant attitudes. By isolating one instance of death on the border and considering the discourse that ensued in the following two months, this research assesses mechanisms of a rhetoric of death (necrorhetoric) as they relate to sociopolitical constructions of the migrant. The political apparatus of the State as a natural extension of biopower confers upon it the authority to produce sacred life or bare life (homo sacer). This process of production creates conditions of being which precede the potential to kill without allegation of murder, constructs the content of sovereign power, and results in a social sense-making, or public doxa, that informs cultural values and justifies collective attitudes. As the process is perfected, meticulous and calculated demonstrations of force become a crucial exercise of sovereignty. Efforts to enforce and maintain control of the border develop into increasingly streamlined methods, placing the state on an incremental trajectory of power that inaugurates ritualized and state sanctioned violence. The aggrieved take on a sociopolitical role that renders their lives less than fully human, allowing further alienation and segregation to occur. The desire to maintain sovereign power is the typifying force around which United States history has been shaped, and this desire continues to inform contemporary American policy. Analysis of legal, presidential, and news documents pertaining to the deaths of Oscar Martinez Ramirez and his twenty-three-month-old daughter, Valeria, reveals a network of rhetorical maneuvering that gives evidence of a necropolitical environment defined by its intentional and obscure brutality. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis English 2020
author2 Baumann, Natalie (Author)
author_facet Baumann, Natalie (Author)
title Necro-Rhetorical Constructions of the Migrant: An Image of Death on the Border
title_short Necro-Rhetorical Constructions of the Migrant: An Image of Death on the Border
title_full Necro-Rhetorical Constructions of the Migrant: An Image of Death on the Border
title_fullStr Necro-Rhetorical Constructions of the Migrant: An Image of Death on the Border
title_full_unstemmed Necro-Rhetorical Constructions of the Migrant: An Image of Death on the Border
title_sort necro-rhetorical constructions of the migrant: an image of death on the border
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57116
_version_ 1719315752547254272