Author:
Gonzalez Jaime Acosta,Meyerhoff Eli
Abstract
Abstract
Duke University was founded on tobacco wealth, and now it has a tobacco-free campus. How should we understand this change? How can communities around this university, and higher education broadly, reckon with our historical and ongoing complicities with tobacco capitalism? This article examines how the individualized subject has been historically constructed, in response to resistances, through supplementary relations between the university and tobacco industries. With abolitionist university studies, the authors focus on the postslavery university as a key site for these individualizing processes. They situate Duke as a nexus of new means of capitalist accumulation, including, on the one hand, the postslavery university as an institution for disciplining, individualizing, and differentiating wage laborers and, on the other, the tobacco industry's shift to monopolization and mass consumption of tobacco commodities. The long Black freedom movement continues in the post-WWII era with resistances that push capitalism into crisis, while simultaneously, capitalism's coping mechanism of tobacco use has the unintended consequence of mass death. This article explores how, at the site of Duke, part of capitalism's response to resistance movements has been to deepen the individualization processes, charging individuals with taking on responsibility for the costs of both tobacco use and higher education. The authors ask how narratives of smoke-free and tobacco-free campuses could interlink with postracial narratives to obscure how the tobacco companies and universities have accumulated capital through racism, deception, dispossession, and exploitation.
Subject
Anthropology,Cultural Studies,Gender Studies
Reference75 articles.
1. American Nonsmokers’ Rights Foundation. “Smokefree and Tobacco-Free U.S. and Tribal Colleges and Universities.” October8, 2020. no-smoke.org/wp-content/uploads/pdf/smokefreecollegesuniversities.pdf.
2. American Tobacco Company. Sold American! The First Fifty Years. Industry Documents Library, 1954. www.industrydocuments.ucsf.edu/docs/#id=nzvm0042
3. Barahona
Elizabeth
. “The History of Latinx Students at Duke University.” Undergraduate honors thesis, Duke University, 2018. www.activatinghistoryatduke.com/uploads/8/9/2/3/89234082/elizabeth_barahona_thesis.pdf.
4. Tobacco Capitalism
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献