Charles Taylor Book Award Honorable Mention 2025: Joanna Wuest, for Born This Way: Science, Citizenship, and Inequality in the American LGBTQ+ Movement
Born This Way invites readers to unpack what has become a widespread social “fact”: the belief that sexual and gender identities are biologically innate. Through careful historical analysis, Wuest reveals how this framework emerged in the 1950s and 1960s as LGBTQ+ activists turned to mental health professionals to challenge the pathologization of homosexuality, forging a path that intertwined identity claims with emerging scientific authority. Demonstrating how the scientization of sexuality can be a double-edged sword—enabling acceptance and alliance while also opening the door to politically dangerous forms of essentialism and scapegoating— Born This Way bridges the politics of identity and political economy, laying bare the ideological stakes of claiming biology as destiny.
Charles Taylor Book Award Honorable Mention 2024: Asad L. Asad, for Engage and Evade: How Latino Immigrant Families Manage Surveillance in Everyday Life
In Engage and Evade: How Latino Immigrant Families Manage Surveillance in Everyday Life (Princeton University Press, 2023), Asad L. Asad provides a phenomenological account of the lives of undocumented immigrants, delineating how they experience—and the meanings they ascribe to—various forms of surveillance. Drawing from in-depth interviews and ethnographic research, Asad provides a nuanced account of why the undocumented do not simply “evade” state institutions, but also, at different moments, find it advantageous to “engage” with them. The text itself is layered with ethnographic writing and insights—for example, from an immigration court—while the methodological appendix includes a thoughtful discussion of the author’s positionality vis-à-vis his interlocutors. As this well-researched and clearly argued ethnographic work usefully highlights how interpretive approaches can contribute to our understanding of complex and politically salient topics, the committee is pleased to recognize Engage and Evade with the Honorable Mention for this year's Charles Taylor book award.
Charles Taylor Book Award Honorable Mention 2023: José Ciro Martínez, for States of Subsistence: The Politics of Bread in Contemporary Jordan
States of Subsistence is a journey that leaves the reader sensing the smell of khubz ‘arabi and pondering how the state is performed in Jordan and beyond. Through an ethnographic study of subsidized bread, Martínez pursues “the conundrums that come with being governed by something we can feel, hear, smell, and discuss, but never see” (5). He works at bakeries, interviews policymakers, and spends time with average citizens to understand how subsidized bread is entangled with weighty issues of state authority. Drawing on this long-term immersion, the book shifts attention from the institutions and events that have dominated the study of bread politics to the routines of food production and distribution as sensory rituals connecting citizens to the state. Taking bread and bakeries as an analytical vantage point, Martínez shows how political subjectivities are shaped through embodied relationships to the state, and how the state itself is “a set of relations and practices that must be constantly renewed” (12). States of Subsistence is a pertinent example of how systematic engagement with the ordinary can lead to unexpected yet profound insights, demystifying that most consequential abstraction in political thought and life—the state.