Description

Book Synopsis
The history of slavery, colonization, subjugation, gratuitous violence, and the denial of basic human rights to people of African descent has led Afro-Pessimists to look at black existence through the lens of white supremacy and anti-blackness. Against this trend, Black Existential Freedom argues that Blackness is not inherently synonymous with victimhood. Rather, it is inextricable from existential freedom and the struggle for political liberation.

This book presents an existential analysis of continental and diasporic African experiences through critical interpretations of music, film, and fiction that portray what it means to be human— to persevere in the tension between life and physical, psychological, and social death—for the sake of freedom. With its transdisciplinary perspective and convergence of Africana existential philosophy, African-American Studies, Afro-French Studies, Diaspora Studies, and African studies, this book is not concerned with disciplinary boundaries or certain appropriations of European metaphysics that are committed to a reading of black “non-being.” Black Existential Freedom explores the continuities and discontinuities of black existence and the manifestations and the meanings of blackness within different countries, time periods, and social and political contexts. This book empowers the reader to understand and process the complexities of racialized identity in a globalized contemporary society.Ultimately, it is an ode to human survival and freedom.


Table of Contents
Introduction

I: Diasporic Blues

  • Chapter 1: Black in Blue: Subjectivity, catastrophe, and memory in Guy Deslauriers’ The Middle Passage
  • Chapter 2: Sing to Be Free
  • Chapter 3: Haiti 2010, Life Arises from the Rubble

II: Come on Children of the Homeland, the Day of Glory has Arrived

  • Chapter 4: Black in Blue, Red, and White
  • Chapter 5: “COMMUNITY” and “COLOR” : Black in Blue White and Red
  • Chapter 6: I Remember Therefore I suffer/I Remember Therefore I am

III: I called from the depth
  • Chapter 7: Human/Non-Human: The Negative Utopia of Sub-Saharan African Migration
  • Chapter 8: The other Nègre: Treatment of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender People in Uganda and South Africa

Conclusion

Black Existential Freedom

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    A Hardback by Nathalie Etoke

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      View other formats and editions of Black Existential Freedom by Nathalie Etoke

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 15/11/2022
      ISBN13: 9781538157060, 978-1538157060
      ISBN10: 1538157063

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The history of slavery, colonization, subjugation, gratuitous violence, and the denial of basic human rights to people of African descent has led Afro-Pessimists to look at black existence through the lens of white supremacy and anti-blackness. Against this trend, Black Existential Freedom argues that Blackness is not inherently synonymous with victimhood. Rather, it is inextricable from existential freedom and the struggle for political liberation.

      This book presents an existential analysis of continental and diasporic African experiences through critical interpretations of music, film, and fiction that portray what it means to be human— to persevere in the tension between life and physical, psychological, and social death—for the sake of freedom. With its transdisciplinary perspective and convergence of Africana existential philosophy, African-American Studies, Afro-French Studies, Diaspora Studies, and African studies, this book is not concerned with disciplinary boundaries or certain appropriations of European metaphysics that are committed to a reading of black “non-being.” Black Existential Freedom explores the continuities and discontinuities of black existence and the manifestations and the meanings of blackness within different countries, time periods, and social and political contexts. This book empowers the reader to understand and process the complexities of racialized identity in a globalized contemporary society.Ultimately, it is an ode to human survival and freedom.


      Table of Contents
      Introduction

      I: Diasporic Blues

      • Chapter 1: Black in Blue: Subjectivity, catastrophe, and memory in Guy Deslauriers’ The Middle Passage
      • Chapter 2: Sing to Be Free
      • Chapter 3: Haiti 2010, Life Arises from the Rubble

      II: Come on Children of the Homeland, the Day of Glory has Arrived

      • Chapter 4: Black in Blue, Red, and White
      • Chapter 5: “COMMUNITY” and “COLOR” : Black in Blue White and Red
      • Chapter 6: I Remember Therefore I suffer/I Remember Therefore I am

      III: I called from the depth
      • Chapter 7: Human/Non-Human: The Negative Utopia of Sub-Saharan African Migration
      • Chapter 8: The other Nègre: Treatment of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender People in Uganda and South Africa

      Conclusion

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