ebook img

Electing Citizens and Aliens: A Theology of Migration, Borders, and Belonging by Justin Parrish ... PDF

252 Pages·2015·1.27 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Electing Citizens and Aliens: A Theology of Migration, Borders, and Belonging by Justin Parrish ...

Electing Citizens and Aliens: A Theology of Migration, Borders, and Belonging by Justin Parrish Ashworth Date: __________________ Approved: _______________________ Prof. Willie J. Jennings, Supervisor _______________________ Prof. Stanley Hauerwas _______________________ Prof. Edgardo Colón-Emeric _______________________ Prof. Walter D. Mignolo _______________________ Prof. Leo R. Chavez Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Theology in the Divinity School of Duke University 2015 Copyright by Justin Parrish Ashworth 2015 Abstract This work offers a theological reading of and response to migration restrictions in the United States of America, focusing on their instantiation in the U.S.-Mexico border and on the discourses and practices of citizenship and alienage that support these arrangements. Unlike most works in Christian immigration ethics, this work not only highlights the negative effects of migration policies, but also unearths the basic assumptions grounding these policies, all while displaying the racial and theological imaginaries grounding them. The first part of this work argues that the assumption grounding all migration policies is “the preferential option for one’s own people,” that is, the view that citizens not only may but must prefer or prioritize the life of fellow citizens over that of non- citizens. The first chapter draws on French theorist Michel Foucault and decolonial intellectuals to offer a reading of three non-theological arguments for migration restrictions, namely, security, economics, and culture. In short, those who believe the U.S. must have migration restrictions believe that aliens may threaten the security, economy, and culture—that is, the life—of citizens. The second chapter interrogates theological arguments for national borders, the most visible way of restricting migration, showing that ultimately theologians assume and assert the legitimacy of Westphalian nation-state sovereignty. The third chapter offers a theological reading of the concrete effects of border practices on “illegal aliens,” arguing that national borders will continue to exist as long as citizens assume both that “our people” means “fellow citizens,” and also that they may and must prefer and prioritize their life over that of others. The latter assumption is particularly troubling because it implies that the insecurity, poverty, and iii cultural denigration that aliens face—though perhaps saddening—is ultimately just. The central argument of the second, constructive part of this work is that Christians (and others) should not prefer or prioritize fellow citizens over non-citizens. Chapter 4 discusses the nature and task of citizenship in light of the parable of the Merciful Samaritan in Luke’s Gospel, and chapter 5 employs Hispanic theologians to articulate an alternative account of faithful citizenship with undocumented Latina/o migrants. The doctrine of election holds the dissertation together theologically. The first part shows that the preferential option for one’s own people—even when proclaimed by a theologian—is a secularized performance of the doctrine of election: citizens elect themselves for life and belonging, but in so doing they damn the undocumented to death and anxiety. The second part shows that God’s election of the Jews, favor for the poor, and destiny of fellowship for the world sets Christians on a trajectory of border-crossing solidarity that opposes the preferential option for one’s own and de-borders belonging. iv For Tiffany, Tommy, and Tomi — chirping birds v Contents Abstract .............................................................................................................................. iii Contents ............................................................................................................................. vi Introduction ......................................................................................................................... 1 Meeting Aliens ................................................................................................................ 1 Three Words on Words ................................................................................................. 16 PART ONE: BORDERING BELONGING ..................................................................... 18 Chapter 1: Choose Life: The Architecture of Migration Restriction ................................ 19 Introduction ................................................................................................................... 19 Arguments for Restriction: Security, Economics, and Culture ..................................... 21 Physical Security ....................................................................................................... 22 Economic Well-being ................................................................................................ 25 Cultural Integrity ....................................................................................................... 28 Summary .................................................................................................................... 30 The Biopolitical Logic of the Arguments: Liberation, Life, and Race ......................... 31 Liberation from Repression and Insecurity ............................................................... 32 The Politics of Sustaining and Cultivating Life ........................................................ 35 The Uses of Race ....................................................................................................... 41 The Racial Logic of the Arguments: Division, Subordination, and Norming .............. 42 The Geopolitics of National Distinctions .................................................................. 43 Subordination and Norming ...................................................................................... 50 Conclusion ..................................................................................................................... 61 Chapter 2: Electing One’s Own: Sovereignty, Preference, and the Theology of Migration Restriction ......................................................................................................................... 63 Introduction ................................................................................................................... 63 Asserting Sovereignty: Strangers No Longer ............................................................... 66 Grounding Sovereignty: Three Views........................................................................... 74 vi Defining Sovereignty: Imagining Our Own .................................................................. 82 Secularizing Sovereignty: Electing Our Own ............................................................... 87 Conclusion: Assessing Sovereignty .............................................................................. 94 Chapter 3: The Dividing Wall of Hostility: Damning the Undocumented ....................... 99 Introduction ................................................................................................................... 99 The Damnation of Border Practices ............................................................................ 103 The Unseen Deadliness of the Border Apparatus ....................................................... 109 Deterrence, Death, and Violence ............................................................................. 109 Deportation, Detention, Exploitation, and Family Separation ................................ 114 Racialized Anxiety over Exclusion ............................................................................. 119 Two Stories of Belonging ........................................................................................ 123 Anxiety and Reprobation ......................................................................................... 127 The Moralism of Attempts to Make Borders More Humane ...................................... 129 Conclusion ................................................................................................................... 132 PART TWO: LIBERATING BELONGING .................................................................. 136 Chapter 4: Samaritan Citizenship: A Political Theology of Neighbor-Love .................. 137 Introduction ................................................................................................................. 137 The Ethics of Proximity in Augustinian Liberalism ................................................... 140 The Merciful Samaritan in Context ............................................................................. 145 Defining Nearness ....................................................................................................... 153 Proximity as Nature? ............................................................................................... 154 Segregated Proximity .............................................................................................. 158 The Nature of Proximity .......................................................................................... 160 Summary of Objections ........................................................................................... 166 Election and the Merciful Samaritan ........................................................................... 167 Predestined for Fellowship ...................................................................................... 170 Decision for the Poor ............................................................................................... 175 Samaritan Citizenship: Solidarity without Boundaries ............................................... 179 vii Solidarity with the Vulnerable ................................................................................. 180 Solidarity in Boundary-Crossing Fellowship .......................................................... 183 Conclusion: Against the Preferential Option for One’s Own ..................................... 184 Chapter 5: Hacia una Iglesia Mezclada: De-Bordering Belonging................................ 186 Introduction: Toward a Fellowship of Co-Sufferers ................................................... 186 Virgilio Elizondo: The Election, Vocation, and Hope of Mestiza/os .......................... 191 The Promise and Problems of Elizondo’s Mestizaje ................................................... 197 Elected for Mezcolanza ............................................................................................... 204 The Election of Israel .............................................................................................. 204 Favoring the Poor .................................................................................................... 211 Notes toward De-Bordered Belonging ........................................................................ 217 Conclusion ................................................................................................................... 221 Conclusion ...................................................................................................................... 223 Bibliography ................................................................................................................... 226 Biography ........................................................................................................................ 244 viii Introduction Meeting Aliens I was thirty years old when I first met someone who had been deported. Or at least that was the first time I was aware of such an encounter. How could I possibly have avoided contact with deportees while growing up and living in Southern California during the 1990s and early-2000s? Immigrants were a fixture of my schooling years: my high school was one-third Hispanic, my college had student migrants and immigrants from all over the world, and my seminary prided itself on being a Christian witness in a diverse world. I had lived in Southern California cities where white people were barely the demographic majority and I had spoken (broken) Spanish with coworkers at a restaurant and a car dealership. Even stranger than the amount of time it took me to meet a deportee is that I met this man in rural Guatemala, his place of birth. Why did it take me thirty years and thousands of miles of travel to hear the story of someone who had been deported? And yet his deportation story was not new to me, and it would not be new to most American citizens. I had heard such stories in the media, on the lips of family and friends, and in books and newspaper articles. We all know the story. He had been pulled over by a police officer for drunk driving. The officer soon found out that he was also driving without a license. He was swiftly taken into custody, detained, tried, and sent back to Guatemala. So clinical, so typical. His response to the incident was equally clinical: he understood why he had been deported, given that he had broken the law and that the 1 government had a right to punish lawbreakers. He felt that he should not have done what he had done. I was unsurprised when he said he was planning to return to the U.S. and that he should therefore prepare by speaking English, for we are told that migrants are opportunistic birds in flight, wandering to and fro and learning the languages they must in order to survive. I knew everything about this man. Or at least men like this man. But in reality I didn’t know him. I had shut my eyes to the undocumented non- citizens living and working and worshipping next to me. To be sure, non-citizens like him often avoid contact with people who could get them in trouble with the police and sent to a country they haven’t seen in years, often decades. It is no wonder that undocumented non-citizens try to remain out of sight. But why do people like me avoid people like them? It is as if I had willfully tried not to be bothered by the questions that so haunt people like this man. Will I again have to keep quiet when my boss pays me less than I deserve? Will la migra pound on my door today? Will I be stuffed into a filthy detention center, humiliated in court, dragged to a country that I have not lived in for years? Will this be the last day I see my family? I had never asked these questions or suffered the anxieties of friends or family members who do. I had smelled and tasted the food of people with these anxieties, heard their music, seen their clothing, even touched their bodies—but never had I feared their fears or rejoiced in their joys. I didn’t know this man. Nor even people like him. This encounter shocked me, not only because I recognized how close to and far from non-citizens I had always lived my life, but all the more because this man and I are Christians. Before he told his story, we had been reading the same words from scripture, singing the same songs, eating meals, sharing stories, praying, making jokes. Upon 2

Description:
Racialized Anxiety over Exclusion . bodies—but never had I feared their fears or rejoiced in their joys. David Baker and T. Desmond . idols will vanquish those who have always suffered most at the hands of the powerful,.
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.