Ebook: Afro-Pessimism: An Introduction
Author: Frank B. Wilderson III, C. S. Soong, Saidiya Hartman, Steve Martinot, Jared Sexton, Hortense J. Spillers
- Genre: Other Social Sciences // Politics
- Tags: Afropessimism Afro-Pessimism Race Racism White-Supremacy Blackness Orlando Patterson Frantz Fanon Fanon Slave Slavery Exclusion Social Death Alienation Otherness Ontology Negation Negativity Nihilism Liberation
- Year: 2017
- Publisher: racked & dispatched
- City: Minneapolis
- Language: English
- pdf
https://rackedanddispatched.noblogs.org/
This reader is intended to be an introduction to the theory called Afro-pessimism. Collected in this volume are articles spanning three decades of thought, with topics ranging from police violence, the labor of Black women, and the slave’s transformation following emancipation, to the struggles of the Black Liberation Army and elements of anti-Blackness in Indigenous struggles for sovereignty. Although the authors use differing methods of analysis, they all approach them with a shared theoretical understanding of slavery, race, and the totality of anti-Blackness; it is this shared understanding that has been called Afro-pessimism. Importantly though, rather than a fixed ideology, Afro-pessimism is better thought of as a theoretical lens for situating relations of power, at the level of the political and the libidinal. Afro-pessimism, in many ways, picks up the critiques started by Black revolutionaries in the 1960s and 70s, elaborating their short-comings and addressing their failures.
To overcome anti-blackness, there would have to be what Fanon had called a 'program of complete disorder,' an expropriation and affirmation of the very violence perpetuated against black existence and a fundamental reorientation of the social coordinates of the human relation. It would entail a war against the concept of humanity and a war that splits civil society to its core, a civil war that would elaborate itself to the death.
This reader is intended to be an introduction to the theory called Afro-pessimism. Collected in this volume are articles spanning three decades of thought, with topics ranging from police violence, the labor of Black women, and the slave’s transformation following emancipation, to the struggles of the Black Liberation Army and elements of anti-Blackness in Indigenous struggles for sovereignty. Although the authors use differing methods of analysis, they all approach them with a shared theoretical understanding of slavery, race, and the totality of anti-Blackness; it is this shared understanding that has been called Afro-pessimism. Importantly though, rather than a fixed ideology, Afro-pessimism is better thought of as a theoretical lens for situating relations of power, at the level of the political and the libidinal. Afro-pessimism, in many ways, picks up the critiques started by Black revolutionaries in the 1960s and 70s, elaborating their short-comings and addressing their failures.
To overcome anti-blackness, there would have to be what Fanon had called a 'program of complete disorder,' an expropriation and affirmation of the very violence perpetuated against black existence and a fundamental reorientation of the social coordinates of the human relation. It would entail a war against the concept of humanity and a war that splits civil society to its core, a civil war that would elaborate itself to the death.
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