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The Management of Hate
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Table of Contents

List of Illustrations ix Preface xi Acknowledgments xv Abbreviations xix Part I 1 A Specter of Nationalism 3 Taming the Demons 6 The National Remains 10 New Poor, Old Ghosts 15 On the Streets of Treptow-Kopenick 21 2 East and West , Right and Left 29 Young, National, Social 32 Imagining Ossis 38 Grandpa Was SS, Dad Was Stasi 42 3 The Kebab and the Wurst 55 The Beer at Little Istanbul Tastes Better 56 Distinctions in the Landscape of Otherness 64 Talking Immigrants 71 Everything in Moderation 79 Part II 4 Penal Regimes of Political Delinquency 87 "There Shall Be No Censorship" 91 Legal (In)distinctions 99 Indeterminate Injunctions 114 5 The State Inside 117 Police Overkill 124 Men of Confidence 129 Friends and Traitors 133 Cops and Thieves 137 6 Knowing Intimately 141 A Close Call, or, The Occult Paths of Knowledge 144 The Surveillance Machine 149 The Ethics and Praxis of Street Social Work 154 Governance Up Close 159 7 Advances in the Sciences of Exorcism 169 Etiologies 173 Facing the Facts 176 The Rational Kernel 182 If It Walks Like a Nazi 188 The Nationalist Thing 192 Part III 8 Inoculating the National Public 199 A Civilizing Mission 204 Building Coalitions 209 Whose Demonstration? 214 Crafting Resilience 221 9 National Visions 227 Stars over Berlin 227 Reading the Stars 230 Heterotopic Landscapes 232 Tactics of Visibility 237 Just Mourning 248 Catastrophe at the Gate 251 Afterword 261 Bibliography 269 Index 291

About the Author

Nitzan Shoshan is assistant professor at the Center for Sociological Studies at the Colegio de Mexico in Mexico City.

Reviews

"Winner of the 2017 William A. Douglass Prize in Europeanist Anthropology, Society for the Anthropology of Europe of the American Anthropological Association"

"Honorable Mention for the 2017 Gregory Bateson Prize, The Society for Cultural Anthropology"

"Honorable Mention for the 2017 APLA Book Prize, Association for Political and Legal Anthropology"

"As a study of the political self-understanding and everyday lives of young right-wing extremism in the outskirts of the former East Berlin, Shoshan’s study is very much worth reading."---John Abromeit, German Studies Review

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