
New Books in Critical Theory Miriam Ticktin, "Against Innocence: Undoing and Remaking the World" (U Chicago Press, 2025)
Mar 19, 2026
Miriam Ticktin, a CUNY anthropology professor who studies migration and humanitarianism, discusses her book Against Innocence: Undoing and Remaking the World. She explores how claims of innocence shape political life and justify intervention. She traces innocence across migration, visual culture, race, reproduction, and environmental claims. She also outlines commoning and collective responsibility as alternatives.
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Innocence As A Political Technology
- Innocence is a transnational, shape-shifting political tool that creates hierarchies by marking some as innocent and others permanently non-innocent.
- Miriam Ticktin links its rise to post-1960s neoliberal shifts, humanitarianism, and Great Replacement style racial nostalgia that demand continually produced innocent victims.
How Racial Innocence Absolves Responsibility
- Racial innocence functions as a claim of not knowing that absolves people of responsibility for racism by converting culpability into alleged ignorance.
- Ticktin ties this to concepts like white ignorance and gives examples like Amy Cooper and Justin Trudeau's blackface apology.
Adopt Implicatedness Not Innocence
- Move from binary innocence/guilt language to relational accountability by naming implicatedness, beneficiary status, or perpetuation.
- Ticktin recommends using terms like implicated or beneficiary to situate people in collective histories without absolving responsibility.

