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      Radical Care

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      Social Text
      Duke University Press

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          Abstract

          This article introduces the topic of radical care by providing a genealogy of care as a vital but underexamined praxis of radical politics that provides spaces of hope in precarious times. Following recent theoretical interventions into the importance of self-care despite its susceptibility to neoliberal co-optation, the potentialities of self-care may be expanded outward to include other forms that push back against structural disadvantage. Care contains radical promise through a grounding in autonomous direct action and nonhierarchical collective work. However, because radical care is inseparable from systemic inequality and power structures, it can also be used to coerce subjects into new forms of surveillance and unpaid labor, to make up for institutional neglect, and even to position some groups against others, determining who is worthy of care and who is not. With care reentering the zeitgeist as a reaction to today’s political climate, radical care engages histories of grassroots community action and negotiates neoliberal models for self-care. Studies of care thereby prompt us to consider how and when care becomes visible, valued, and necessary within broader social movements. To that end, the articles in this collection locate and analyze the mediated boundaries of what it means for individuals and groups to feel and provide care, survive, and even dare to thrive in environments that challenge their very existence. As the traditionally undervalued labor of caring becomes recognized as a key element of individual and community resilience, radical care provides a roadmap for envisioning an otherwise.

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          Most cited references17

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          Living a Feminist Life

          Sara Ahmed (2017)
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            Matters of care in technoscience: Assembling neglected things

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              Body and Soul

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Social Text
                Duke University Press
                0164-2472
                1527-1951
                March 1 2020
                March 1 2020
                : 38
                : 1
                : 1-16
                Article
                10.1215/01642472-7971067
                c5bf0c68-d6fa-42a2-a2a3-3535e526bb11
                © 2020
                History

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