Citizenship in Cold War America : the national security state and the possibilities of dissent /

Publisher's description: In the wake of 9/11, many Americans have deplored the dangers to liberty posed by a growing surveillance state. In this book, Andrea Friedman moves beyond the standard security/liberty dichotomy, weaving together often forgotten episodes of early Cold War history to rev...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Friedman, Andrea (Author)
Published: University of Massachusetts Press,
Publisher Address: Boston :
Publication Dates: [2014]
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Series: Culture, politics, and the Cold War
Subjects:
Summary: Publisher's description: In the wake of 9/11, many Americans have deplored the dangers to liberty posed by a growing surveillance state. In this book, Andrea Friedman moves beyond the standard security/liberty dichotomy, weaving together often forgotten episodes of early Cold War history to reveal how the obsession with national security enabled dissent and fostered new imaginings of democracy. Friedman traverses immigration law and loyalty boards, popular culture and theoretical treatises, U.S. courtrooms and Puerto Rican jails, to demonstrate how Cold War repression made visible in new ways the unevenness and limitations of American citizenship. Highlighting the ways that race and gender shaped critiques and defenses of the national security regime, she offers new insight into the contradictions of Cold War political culture.
Carrier Form: xii, 274 pages ; 24 cm.
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references (pages 199-265) and index.
ISBN: 9781625340689
1625340680
9781625340672
1625340672
Index Number: JK1759
CLC: D771.29
D771.224
Call Number: D771.224/F911
Contents: Introduction: Citizenship stories in exceptional times -- Internal security, national security : psychological citizenship in the Cold War era -- The case of the war bride : liberal citizenship and human rights in the national security state -- The right to earn a living : loyalty, race, and economic citizenship -- "A dependent independence and a dominated dominion" : empire and semi-citizenship on the Cold War stage -- "The show of violence" : social citizenship, democracy, and the remaking of national security -- Conclusion: Exceptions, exceptionalism, and US citizenship.