
Reproducing the French Race
Immigration, Intimacy, and Embodiment in the Early Twentieth Century
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Reproducing the French Race
Immigration, Intimacy, and Embodiment in the Early Twentieth Century
About this book
By focusing on telling aspects of the immigration debate, Camiscioli reveals how racial hierarchies were constructed, how gender figured in their creation, and how only white Europeans were cast as assimilable. Delving into pronatalist politics, she describes how potential immigrants were ranked according to their imagined capacity to adapt to the workplace and family life in France. She traces the links between racialized categories and concerns about industrial skills and output, and she examines medico-hygienic texts on interracial sex, connecting those to the crusade against prostitution and the related campaign to abolish "white slavery," the alleged entrapment of (white) women for sale into prostitution abroad. Camiscioli also explores the debate surrounding the 1927 law that first made it possible for French women who married foreigners to keep their French nationality. She concludes by linking the Third Republic's impulse to create racial hierarchies to the emergence of the Vichy regime.
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Table of contents
- Content s
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Embodiment and the Nation
- 1. Immigration, Demography, and Pronatalism
- 2. Labor Power and the Racial Economy
- 3. Hybridity and Its Discontents
- 4. Black Migrants, White Slavery: Métissage in the Metropole and Abroad
- 5. Intermarriage, Independent Nationality, and Individual Rights
- Conclusion: Gender, Race, and Republican Embodiment
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index