Description

Book Synopsis

Allan D. Cooper demonstrates how the resistance to slavery served to unveil the nature of freedom that made possible the abolition movement and anti-colonial struggles. The corpus of human rights law that has evolved over the past two centuries is constructed around the negation of slavery. This book analyzes how slavery mutated into racial identification that governments enforce against their own population to advance more efficient methods of discipline and control. The Shadow that Lingers reveals how race is used to traumatize human beings by embodying inferiority and powerlessness, even for whites that claim privilege under racialized regimes. As an ideology of power, race becomes contextualized to fit local cultures, resulting in contradictory understandings of race from one culture to another. This book focuses attention on how racial hybridity among mixed-race communities poses challenges for racial purists, and how such communities endeavor to construct racial identities that often differentiate themselves from being black. The book concludes with an analysis of how the pursuit of freedom inevitably requires the reification of a non-racial identity.



Table of Contents

Chapter One: The Authoritarian Imagination

Chapter Two: The Cybernetics of Enslavement

Chapter Three: Slavery and Reactance

Chapter Four: The Legal Architecture of Freedom

Chapter Five: White Reactance Following Emancipation

Chapter Six: Carcerality and Freedom of Movement

Chapter Seven: Anomalies in the Ideologies of Domination

Conclusion: Freedom as the Process of Becoming Human

The Shadow that Lingers: What Slavery Teaches Us

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    A Hardback by Allan D Cooper

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      View other formats and editions of The Shadow that Lingers: What Slavery Teaches Us by Allan D Cooper

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 05/06/2023
      ISBN13: 9781666929249, 978-1666929249
      ISBN10: 1666929247

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Allan D. Cooper demonstrates how the resistance to slavery served to unveil the nature of freedom that made possible the abolition movement and anti-colonial struggles. The corpus of human rights law that has evolved over the past two centuries is constructed around the negation of slavery. This book analyzes how slavery mutated into racial identification that governments enforce against their own population to advance more efficient methods of discipline and control. The Shadow that Lingers reveals how race is used to traumatize human beings by embodying inferiority and powerlessness, even for whites that claim privilege under racialized regimes. As an ideology of power, race becomes contextualized to fit local cultures, resulting in contradictory understandings of race from one culture to another. This book focuses attention on how racial hybridity among mixed-race communities poses challenges for racial purists, and how such communities endeavor to construct racial identities that often differentiate themselves from being black. The book concludes with an analysis of how the pursuit of freedom inevitably requires the reification of a non-racial identity.



      Table of Contents

      Chapter One: The Authoritarian Imagination

      Chapter Two: The Cybernetics of Enslavement

      Chapter Three: Slavery and Reactance

      Chapter Four: The Legal Architecture of Freedom

      Chapter Five: White Reactance Following Emancipation

      Chapter Six: Carcerality and Freedom of Movement

      Chapter Seven: Anomalies in the Ideologies of Domination

      Conclusion: Freedom as the Process of Becoming Human

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