
New Books Network David L. Eng, "Reparations and the Human" (Duke UP, 2025)
Mar 3, 2026
David L. Eng, Richard L. Fisher Professor at UPenn and author of Reparations and the Human, brings an interdisciplinary lens from law and psychoanalysis. He explores reparations across the Transpacific, the colonial roots of who counts as human, contrasts postwar reckonings, and traces material links from dispossession to the atomic bomb. Short, provocative, and wide-ranging.
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Korean Adoptee Mina Shaped the Book's Question
- David L. Eng recounts a case history of a Korean transnational adoptee named Mina whose extreme idealization of her white adoptive mother and hatred of her Korean birth mother inverted typical adoption dynamics.
- This clinical vignette led Eng to link Kleinian reparation mechanisms to racial reparation and to frame the book's inquiry into how repair functions across law and psychoanalysis.
The Human Became A Politically Policed Noun
- Eng highlights a linguistic shift: human became a noun around 1840, turning a descriptive adjective into a political universal that could be policed.
- That nominalization enabled liberal states to claim universal humanitarian ideals while differentiating and excluding colonial subjects.
Locke's Two Lives Of Reparation
- Eng reads Locke not only as a theorist of property but as a colonial administrator whose Treatises repeatedly use reparations to justify dispossession and extermination of Indigenous peoples.
- He describes reparations having two bodies: one protecting European rights, the other rationalizing violence in the New World.





