9780816632695-0816632693-Faking It: U.S. Hegemony in a “Post-Phallic” Era

Faking It: U.S. Hegemony in a “Post-Phallic” Era

ISBN-13: 9780816632695
ISBN-10: 0816632693
Edition: First Edition
Author: Cynthia Weber
Publication date: 1999
Publisher: Univ Of Minnesota Press
Format: Hardcover 176 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780816632695
ISBN-10: 0816632693
Edition: First Edition
Author: Cynthia Weber
Publication date: 1999
Publisher: Univ Of Minnesota Press
Format: Hardcover 176 pages

Summary

Faking It: U.S. Hegemony in a “Post-Phallic” Era (ISBN-13: 9780816632695 and ISBN-10: 0816632693), written by authors Cynthia Weber, was published by Univ Of Minnesota Press in 1999. With an overall rating of 3.5 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Faking It: U.S. Hegemony in a “Post-Phallic” Era (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.37.

Description

Forget Lady Liberty and Uncle Sam -- is the United States queer? Is the American body politic in drag? Cynthia Weber thinks so, at least in terms of recent American foreign relations with Cuba and other Caribbean countries. In Faking It, she queers heterosexual codes of sex and gender and offers a provocative and sometimes hilarious take on U.S. foreign policy that one reader compared to "a combination of Woody Allen and Friedrich Nietzsche finding themselves in a meeting of the Joint Chiefs of Staff."

Weber scrutinizes popular conceptions of how the United States is embodied, arguing that the quality of queerness is both absent and present in these imaginings. She argues that in the U.S. wooing of Castro's Cuba in the aftermath of the Cuban Revolution of 1959 -- an event that "grafted Castro's hypermasculinity onto the iconic femininity of prerevolutionary Cuba" -- the American body politic was symbolically castrated. This event triggered the current, "post-phallic" era in U.S. foreign policy, one that has critically queered American hegemony.

In tracing the subsequent U.S. interventions in the Caribbean -- its invasion of the Dominican Republic under Johnson, of Grenada under Reagan, and of Panama under Bush, as well as its intervention in Haiti under Clinton -- Weber contends that U.S. policy in the Caribbean consists of a series of strategic displacements of castration anxiety. Since 1959, then, Weber argues that the United States has been "faking it" -- "it" being a straight, masculine, hegemonic identity and the phallic power that comes with such an identity.

Weber locates her disruptions smack in the middle of the "serious business" of governing a superpower. Compact anddroll, lively and accessible, Faking It offers new ways to think about American identity and its public construction.

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