Description

Book Synopsis
Christopher Freeburg challenges the imperative to study black social life and slavery and its aftereffects through the lenses of freedom, agency, and domination and instead examines how enslaved Africans created meaning through spirituality, thought, and artistic creativity separate and alongside concerns about freedom.

Trade Review
“The boldness and ambition of Christopher Freeburg's Counterlife are apparent on every page. Freeburg challenges decades of work on U.S. slavery that highlights either slave resistance or white dominance, but often not more than that. As an alternative, Freeburg insists that we consider the many possibilities of both Black life during slavery and the ways that we now dare to imagine and reference that life.” -- Robert F. Reid-Pharr, author of * Archives of Flesh: African America, Spain, and Post-Humanist Critique *
“Christopher Freeburg's theory of counterlife is the refreshing new grammar that breaks out of slavery studies' conscious and unconscious lapses into the binary of social death or social life. Counterlife adds crucial new dimensions to the study of the artistic representation of enslaved Africans. This bold, brilliant study teaches us how to stumble, with uncertainty and vulnerability, into the ever-expanding archive of slavery.” -- Margo Natalie Crawford, author of * Black Post-Blackness: The Black Arts Movement and Twenty-First-Century Aesthetics *
“Counterlife is somewhat loosely defined. . . . The virtue of this more speculative approach is that it brings widely ranging works into dialogue with each other and takes seriously the ways in which writers might wish to write against moral and political expectations—not so much resisting slavery as resisting its dominant modes of representation.” -- Colin Harrison * Modern Language Review *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Slavery's Hereafter
1. Sambo's Cloak
2. Kaleidoscope Views
3. Sounds of Blackness
4. The Last Black Hero
Coda: Chasing Ghosts
Notes
Bibliography

Counterlife

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    A Paperback / softback by Christopher Freeburg

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      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 08/01/2021
      ISBN13: 9781478011446, 978-1478011446
      ISBN10: 1478011440

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Christopher Freeburg challenges the imperative to study black social life and slavery and its aftereffects through the lenses of freedom, agency, and domination and instead examines how enslaved Africans created meaning through spirituality, thought, and artistic creativity separate and alongside concerns about freedom.

      Trade Review
      “The boldness and ambition of Christopher Freeburg's Counterlife are apparent on every page. Freeburg challenges decades of work on U.S. slavery that highlights either slave resistance or white dominance, but often not more than that. As an alternative, Freeburg insists that we consider the many possibilities of both Black life during slavery and the ways that we now dare to imagine and reference that life.” -- Robert F. Reid-Pharr, author of * Archives of Flesh: African America, Spain, and Post-Humanist Critique *
      “Christopher Freeburg's theory of counterlife is the refreshing new grammar that breaks out of slavery studies' conscious and unconscious lapses into the binary of social death or social life. Counterlife adds crucial new dimensions to the study of the artistic representation of enslaved Africans. This bold, brilliant study teaches us how to stumble, with uncertainty and vulnerability, into the ever-expanding archive of slavery.” -- Margo Natalie Crawford, author of * Black Post-Blackness: The Black Arts Movement and Twenty-First-Century Aesthetics *
      “Counterlife is somewhat loosely defined. . . . The virtue of this more speculative approach is that it brings widely ranging works into dialogue with each other and takes seriously the ways in which writers might wish to write against moral and political expectations—not so much resisting slavery as resisting its dominant modes of representation.” -- Colin Harrison * Modern Language Review *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments
      Introduction: Slavery's Hereafter
      1. Sambo's Cloak
      2. Kaleidoscope Views
      3. Sounds of Blackness
      4. The Last Black Hero
      Coda: Chasing Ghosts
      Notes
      Bibliography

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