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Public and private lives: Judith butler's grief and the loss of black self

Publication at Faculty of Social Sciences |
2019

Abstract

By looking at Butler's theories on grief and mourning, I focus on her concept of ecstasy, or the state of being outside of one's self, which illustrates the dependency individuals have on social norms as well as the vulnerability such a system of recognition entails. Using this framework, I discuss how the private and the public spheres can construct public bodies.

If this happens, individuals can have little say over how their bodies are socially signified. To show this, I use the case of Black women in the USA, where systemic oppression constantly draws their bodies into the public's eye.