Books by Annie Hill
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Edited Collections by Annie Hill
Anti-Trafficking Review, 2021
https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201221171
The past decade has seen a dramatic increase in the sit... more https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201221171
The past decade has seen a dramatic increase in the sites for anti-trafficking education and the range of educators who shape how the public and institutions understand and respond to human trafficking.
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Feral Feminisms, 2019
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Women’s Studies in Communication, 2018
https://doi.org/10.1080/07491409.2018.1544000
This forum engages entangled topics including wh... more https://doi.org/10.1080/07491409.2018.1544000
This forum engages entangled topics including white supremacy, immigration, citizenship, native sovereignty, gender and sexual politics, and racialized representations by bringing together scholars working in queer migration studies (QMS) and critical trafficking studies (CTS).
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Articles by Annie Hill
Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2024
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Journal of American College Health, 2023
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Journal of Intercultural Studies, 2021
As COVID-19 ravages the United States, calls to police for COVID-related concerns are proliferati... more As COVID-19 ravages the United States, calls to police for COVID-related concerns are proliferating. This article asks what happens when a contagious and novel disease creates a context wherein neighbours recognise each other – by sight and by sound – as strangers. Marking the twentieth anniversary of Strange Encounters, we revisit Sara Ahmed’s claim that recognition in embodied encounters produces strangers as figures who are internal to community formation, but who remain outside of an imagined community. This claim enables us to parse the relational dynamics in pandemic time that produce neighbours as strangers through both visual and sonic registers. Ahmed’s theory helps to identify how disease opens opportunities to fracture and retract familiarity in ways that intensify police power and often racialised feelings of ‘stranger danger,’ in effect reordering neighbourly relations.
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Rhetoric & Public Affairs, 2021
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First Amendment Studies, 2020
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Anti-Trafficking Review, 2019
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The Gender Policy Report, 2018
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Women’s Studies in Communication, 2018
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PhiloSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism, 2017
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The Gender Policy Report, 2017
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Anti-Trafficking Review, 2016
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Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, 2016
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Review of Communication, 2016
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Chapters by Annie Hill
The Conceit of Context: Resituating Domains in Rhetorical Studies, 2020
This chapter contextualizes the concept of necropolitics that Sara McKinnon applies to her study ... more This chapter contextualizes the concept of necropolitics that Sara McKinnon applies to her study of U.S.-Mexico relations and questions its application in this case. By doing so, I clarify the objects under analysis – the U.S. imaginary and diplomatic interventions to secure dominance – and I show how theories of sovereignty can offer a rigorous critique of U.S. foreign policy rhetoric. I interpret the U.S. accusation that Mexico is a “failing state” as an articulation of sovereignty and a strategy of transnational governance to incapacitate Mexico and force it into a bilateral security agreement. My interpretation reframes U.S.-Mexico relations via a theory of sovereign neomortality, which draws on but does not fully align with the concepts of biopolitics and necropolitics. I contribute this critique because the misreading of context, how and where we are looking, risks applying concepts that fail to capture what we seek to comprehend.
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Negotiating Sex Work: Unintended Consequences of Policy and Activism, University of Minnesota Press
This chapter interrogates the ideological foundations of New Labour’s articulation of the problem... more This chapter interrogates the ideological foundations of New Labour’s articulation of the problem of prostitution and its coordinated strategy to eliminate street sex work. I argue that efforts to divert women from sex work are part of a sympathetic shift in policy, premised on viewing prostitutes as victims of gender-based violence. Although the designation of “victim” suggests sympathy for sex workers, it mobilizes rehabilitative interventions to convert prostitutes into self-regulating, responsible citizens in line with neoliberal demands. Such interventions extend the law’s remit beyond sanctions for specific criminal acts to a wide range of medico-behaviorist exercises that turn the problem of prostitution into a personal one. This prescription demands that sex workers change even when their economic and social conditions remain the same. While the rehabilitative turn may be well-intentioned, its reliance on a crime-control framework privileges victimhood and punishes women who persist in prostitution.
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Book Reviews by Annie Hill
QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking, 2018
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Uploads
Books by Annie Hill
https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/90596
"Trafficking Rhetoric" reframes controversies over labor, citizenship, and migration while challenging the continued traction of race-baiting and gender bias in determining who has the right to live, work, and belong in the nation.
Edited Collections by Annie Hill
The past decade has seen a dramatic increase in the sites for anti-trafficking education and the range of educators who shape how the public and institutions understand and respond to human trafficking.
This special issue releases an orchestra of furies that go by the name of "manifesta." The shapeshifting genre of the manifesta develops from a symphony of anguish into an articulated anger “focused with precision” on what threatens, diminishes, derails, and ends our lives (Lorde 280).
This forum engages entangled topics including white supremacy, immigration, citizenship, native sovereignty, gender and sexual politics, and racialized representations by bringing together scholars working in queer migration studies (QMS) and critical trafficking studies (CTS).
Articles by Annie Hill
Chapters by Annie Hill
Book Reviews by Annie Hill
https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/90596
"Trafficking Rhetoric" reframes controversies over labor, citizenship, and migration while challenging the continued traction of race-baiting and gender bias in determining who has the right to live, work, and belong in the nation.
The past decade has seen a dramatic increase in the sites for anti-trafficking education and the range of educators who shape how the public and institutions understand and respond to human trafficking.
This special issue releases an orchestra of furies that go by the name of "manifesta." The shapeshifting genre of the manifesta develops from a symphony of anguish into an articulated anger “focused with precision” on what threatens, diminishes, derails, and ends our lives (Lorde 280).
This forum engages entangled topics including white supremacy, immigration, citizenship, native sovereignty, gender and sexual politics, and racialized representations by bringing together scholars working in queer migration studies (QMS) and critical trafficking studies (CTS).