Lecture
Time:
Humanities on the Edge presents Kent A. Ono
Date:
5:30 pm –
7:00 pm
Sheldon Museum of Art
Room: Ethel S. Abbott Auditorium
451 N 12th St
Lincoln NE 68588
Lincoln NE 68588
Additional Info: SHEL
Contact:
Marco Abel, mabel2@unl.edu
Kent A. Ono is a professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Utah.
“The Rhetoric of Sanctuary in the Post-Truth Era”
The most recent onslaught of anti-immigration rhetoric and politics has put undocumented immigrants in an even more precarious position. One response by undocumented people has been to take up sanctuary in such places as churches and sanctuary cities—places where U.S. immigration law enforcement may have more limited authority. This talk thinks through the idea of sanctuary and its potential usefulness in the post-truth era. Not only can sanctuary help shield undocumented immigrants from unwanted and unwarranted immigration control and potential violence, but it can also help scholars and students think about freedom outside of the post-truth logics of the state. Indeed, extra-state institutions, such as sanctuaries, make it possible to think about freedom across extra-state institutions transnationally, as well as to imagine freedom as unconnected, and hence untethered, to the logics and institutions of the state, even as the state attempts to use post-truth logics to challenge the power of sanctuaries.
“The Rhetoric of Sanctuary in the Post-Truth Era”
The most recent onslaught of anti-immigration rhetoric and politics has put undocumented immigrants in an even more precarious position. One response by undocumented people has been to take up sanctuary in such places as churches and sanctuary cities—places where U.S. immigration law enforcement may have more limited authority. This talk thinks through the idea of sanctuary and its potential usefulness in the post-truth era. Not only can sanctuary help shield undocumented immigrants from unwanted and unwarranted immigration control and potential violence, but it can also help scholars and students think about freedom outside of the post-truth logics of the state. Indeed, extra-state institutions, such as sanctuaries, make it possible to think about freedom across extra-state institutions transnationally, as well as to imagine freedom as unconnected, and hence untethered, to the logics and institutions of the state, even as the state attempts to use post-truth logics to challenge the power of sanctuaries.
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This event originated in English.