Alma mater University of Chicago Name Nicholas Genova | Role Author Education University of Chicago | |
Institutions Stanford University
Columbia University
University of Bern
University of Amsterdam
King's College London Books Latino crossings, Working the Boundaries: Race, Space, and “Illegality” in Mexican Chicago Fields Anthropology, Ethnic studies |
S2s interview with nicholas de genova on the migration crisis mobility and postcolonial studies
Nicholas de Genova was a lecturer of human geography at King's College London.
Contents
- S2s interview with nicholas de genova on the migration crisis mobility and postcolonial studies
- A Million Mogadishus controversy
- Criticism
- Response from De Genova
- Current Status
- References
He held the Swiss Chair in Mobility Studies during the Fall semester of 2009 as a visiting professor at the Institute of Social Anthropology at the University of Bern in Switzerland. Previously, he was assistant professor of anthropology and Latino Studies at Columbia University from 2000 to 2009. His research centers primarily on the experience of Mexican-Americans in both Mexico and the United States, especially the transnational urban and conceptual spaces they inhabit. He is also concerned with the methodological problems of anthropology.
De Genova received his BA and PhD in anthropology from the University of Chicago. Prior to his time at Columbia, he served as a visiting professor at Stanford University.
He is the author of Working the Boundaries: Race, Space, and "Illegality" in Mexican Chicago (2005), and co-author of Latino Crossings: Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and the Politics of Race and Citizenship (2003). He is also the co-editor of The Deportation Regime: Sovereignty, Space, and the Freedom of Movement (2010) and the editor of Racial (Trans)Formations: Latinos and Asians Remaking the United States (2006).
"A Million Mogadishus" controversy
De Genova briefly rose to notoriety for a statement he made during a faculty teach-in on March 26, 2003, protesting the impending Iraq War. De Genova said that he hoped U.S. soldiers would experience "a million Mogadishus," a reference to the bloody losses U.S. troops suffered in the Battle of Mogadishu in 1993. He also stated that “U.S. patriotism is inseparable from imperial warfare and white supremacy" and that "The only true heroes are those who find ways to defeat the U.S. military."
Criticism
De Genova's comments drew sharp criticism from a number of sources:
At a subsequent student rally at Columbia to support U.S. soldiers in Iraq, demonstrators and speakers sharply criticizied De Genova. The Chronicle of Higher Education subsequently dubbed De Genova as "The most hated professor in America."
The U.S. Military Veterans of Columbia University wrote a letter addressed to Columbia University President Lee Bollinger stating that De Genova's comments were "unacceptable" and demonstrated "his contempt and disregard for human life," and calling on the University to "issue an official condemnation of Professor De Genova’s comments and issue him a letter of reprimand or similar administrative punishment." De Genova later stated that Bollinger "has set himself up as an apologist of war crime and apartheid,” and called upon Bollinger to resign.
This was not the only time De Genova had made controversial remarks. At a Columbia teach-in he told students, “The heritage of the Holocaust belongs to the Palestinian people. The State of Israel has no claim to the heritage of the Holocaust. The heritage of the oppressed belongs to the oppressed, not the oppressor.”
Response from De Genova
In a subsequent letter to Columbia Spectator, De Genova wrote that "imperialism and white supremacy have been constitutive of U.S. nation-state formation and U.S. nationalism" and called for "repudiating all forms of U.S. patriotism" and urged "the defeat of the U.S. war machine." He also stated that "my rejection of U.S. nationalism is an appeal to liberate our own political imaginations such that we might usher in a radically different world in which we will not remain the prisoners of U.S. global domination."
Current Status
De Genova is currently writing a book on free speech during wartime in which he will examine the context in which he made his statements regarding the war as well as the pressure he came under in their aftermath.