Black Existential Freedom

Author:   Nathalie Etoke, Associate Professor of Francophone and Africana Studies at the Graduate Cen
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
ISBN:  

9781538157060


Pages:   170
Publication Date:   15 November 2022
Recommended Age:   From 18 to 22 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Our Price $190.00 Quantity:  
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Black Existential Freedom


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Full Product Details

Author:   Nathalie Etoke, Associate Professor of Francophone and Africana Studies at the Graduate Cen
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 23.90cm
Weight:   0.445kg
ISBN:  

9781538157060


ISBN 10:   1538157063
Pages:   170
Publication Date:   15 November 2022
Recommended Age:   From 18 to 22 years
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Afro-pessimists have dared Black scholars to look into the abyss, and suspend their belief in the illusion of humanity. Nathalie Etoke has accepted that challenge and found at the bottom of nothingness the power of struggle to create existential resources that shatter the shackles thought to ontological bind Blackness to the condition of the slave. Black Existential Freedom takes the refusal of Blacks to BE what the white world demands to be a mode of theorization. Etoke's text is an insightful analysis of racism in France, the U.S., and Africa that cannot be ignored in these darkening times.--Tommy Curry, Distinguished Professor of Africana philosophy & black male studies, School of Philosophy, Psychology, and Language Sciences, The University of Edinburgh


Against the death fetishism, Eurocentrism, and de facto political conservatism of Afro-pessimism, Nathalie Etoke offers, through meticulous scholarship and poetic insight, the existential dimensions--from the global perspective of Black political struggles to the practices of joy and pleasure in everyday life across the African diaspora--of Blackness as an affirmation of life. She exposes the banality of white supremacy, which attacks human agency, dignity, and freedom and argues that the humanity of Black people extends beyond moral and political forms of resistance. It is, as Etoke beautifully demonstrates, in the lived reality of Black people's affirmation of life in contingency, in making meaning beyond the quagmire of despair. Black Existential Freedom reminds us that no better world can emerge without active, fought-for freedom. She counsels us to be inspired and learn from those who rose to the occasion of that responsibility and to draw upon the resources of our creativity at every aspect of existence, which, we should remember, also means life. Yes, this book is at birth a classic work in Black existential thought. Read it. Learn from it. And share it, as I plan to, far and wide. --Lewis R. Gordon, Professor of Philosophy and Africana Studies, University of Connecticut Nathalie Etoke has written a beautiful and moving book that shows how the living practice of existential freedom has never been more important in resisting a politics of discouragement that gives into our seemingly desperate times. She not only answers Afro-pessimism, but also moves widely to bring back Black existentialism to the burning issues of the times--notably the attacks on LGBTQ people of color. She reminds us on every page that Black existential freedom was not and cannot be buried under the horrors of enslavement and colonization. The struggle for freedom is celebrated as what makes us human.--Drucilla Cornell, Professor of Political Science, Comparative Literature, and Women and Gender Studies, Rutgers University Afro-pessimists have dared Black scholars to look into the abyss and suspend their belief in the illusion of humanity. Nathalie Etoke has accepted that challenge and found at the bottom of nothingness the power of struggle to create existential resources that shatter the shackles thought to ontologically bind Blackness to the condition of the slave. Black Existential Freedom takes the refusal of Blacks to BE what the white world demands to be a mode of theorization. Etoke's text is an insightful analysis of racism in France, the United States, and Africa that cannot be ignored in these darkening times.--Tommy Curry, The University of Edinburgh, author of The Man-Not With the characteristic lyricism that readers of Nathalie Etoke would expect, Black Existential Freedom weaves a throbbing counternarrative of continental and diasporic African unremitting insistence on life. Speaking on music, film, and fiction about an existence that includes disaster and hell as undeniable components, Etoke joins the rich history of struggle that generated Black Studies, refusing to see Africana existence through pessimistic, conservative, and distorting lenses that are all too in vogue. Warning that homophobia strengthens bonds between repressive post-colonial states and their disempowered citizens, she offers us a precious, multifaceted archive focused unflinchingly on freedom.--Jane Anna Gordon, author of Statelessness and Contemporary Enslavement


"Afro-pessimists have dared Black scholars to look into the abyss and suspend their belief in the illusion of humanity. Nathalie Etoke has accepted that challenge and found at the bottom of nothingness the power of struggle to create existential resources that shatter the shackles thought to ontologically bind Blackness to the condition of the slave. Black Existential Freedom takes the refusal of Blacks to BE what the white world demands to be a mode of theorization. Etoke's text is an insightful analysis of racism in France, the United States, and Africa that cannot be ignored in these darkening times. Against the death fetishism, Eurocentrism, and de facto political conservatism of Afro-pessimism, Nathalie Etoke offers, through meticulous scholarship and poetic insight, the existential dimensions--from the global perspective of Black political struggles to the practices of joy and pleasure in everyday life across the African diaspora--of Blackness as an affirmation of life. She exposes ""the banality of white supremacy,"" which attacks human agency, dignity, and freedom and argues that the humanity of Black people extends beyond moral and political forms of resistance. It is, as Etoke beautifully demonstrates, in the lived reality of Black people's affirmation of life in contingency, in making meaning beyond the quagmire of despair. Black Existential Freedom reminds us that no better world can emerge without active, fought-for freedom. She counsels us to be inspired and learn from those who rose to the occasion of that responsibility and to draw upon the resources of our creativity at every aspect of existence, which, we should remember, also means life. Yes, this book is at birth a classic work in Black existential thought. Read it. Learn from it. And share it, as I plan to, far and wide."" Nathalie Etoke has written a beautiful and moving book that shows how the living practice of existential freedom has never been more important in resisting a politics of discouragement that gives into our seemingly desperate times. She not only answers Afro-pessimism, but also moves widely to bring back Black existentialism to the burning issues of the times--notably the attacks on LGBTQ people of color. She reminds us on every page that Black existential freedom was not and cannot be buried under the horrors of enslavement and colonization. The struggle for freedom is celebrated as what makes us human. With the characteristic lyricism that readers of Nathalie Etoke would expect, Black Existential Freedom weaves a throbbing counternarrative of continental and diasporic African unremitting insistence on life. Speaking on music, film, and fiction about an existence that includes disaster and hell as undeniable components, Etoke joins the rich history of struggle that generated Black Studies, refusing to see Africana existence through pessimistic, conservative, and distorting lenses that are all too in vogue. Warning that homophobia strengthens bonds between repressive post-colonial states and their disempowered citizens, she offers us a precious, multifaceted archive focused unflinchingly on freedom."


Author Information

Nathalie Etoke is associate professor of French and Africana studies at the Graduate Center, CUNY. Her book Melancholia Africana received the Frantz Fanon Book Award from the Caribbean Philosophical Association. In 2011, she made a documentary entitled Afro Diasporic French Identities that examines how the legacy of slavery and colonization challenges the republican ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity.

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