About

In my research, I work with exhaustion and how it departs from other frameworks that seek to explain, describe, speculate upon, and refract forms of violence and violation. I argue that racial capitalism operates as both a necropolitical strategy and a necro-metaphorization that generates exhaustion among minoritarian populations as a biopolitical logic. I particularly look at the Global South and racialized immigrant women’s cultures in order to argue that exhaustion as a condition reckons with coloniality, migration, violence, debilitation, disability, and precarity.



About

In my research, I work with exhaustion and how it departs from other frameworks that seek to explain, describe, speculate upon, and refract forms of violence and violation. I argue that racial capitalism operates as both a necropolitical strategy and a necro-metaphorization that generates exhaustion among minoritarian populations as a biopolitical logic. I particularly look at the Global South and racialized immigrant women’s cultures in order to argue that exhaustion as a condition reckons with coloniality, migration, violence, debilitation, disability, and precarity.


About keyboard_arrow_down

In my research, I work with exhaustion and how it departs from other frameworks that seek to explain, describe, speculate upon, and refract forms of violence and violation. I argue that racial capitalism operates as both a necropolitical strategy and a necro-metaphorization that generates exhaustion among minoritarian populations as a biopolitical logic. I particularly look at the Global South and racialized immigrant women’s cultures in order to argue that exhaustion as a condition reckons with coloniality, migration, violence, debilitation, disability, and precarity.