Preface: Counter-Racial Formation Theory, Barnor Hesse
Introduction: Racial Optimism and the Drag of Thymotics, P. Khalil
Saucier and Tryon P. Woods
Chapter One: No Reprieve: The “Racial Formation” of the United
States as a Settler-Colonial Empire (Black Power, White-Sociology,
and Omi & Winant, Revisited), Greg Thomas
Chapter Two: Being in the Field: A Reflection on Ethnographic
Practice, P. Khalil Saucier
Chapter Three: Anti-Blackness as Mundane: Black Girls and
Punishment Beyond School Discipline, Connie Wun
Chapter Four: Strangers to the Economy: Black Work and the Wages of
Non-Blackness, Tamara K. Nopper
Chapter Five: At the Intersections of Assemblages: Fanon, Capécia,
and the Unmaking of the Genre Subject, Patrice Douglass
Chapter Six: “Something of the fever and the fret”: Antiblackness
in the Critical Prison Studies fold, Tryon P. Woods
P. Khalil Saucier is chair and associate professor of Africana
Studies at Bucknell University.
Tryon P. Woods is assistant professor of crime and justice studies
at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, and teaches Africana
studies at Rhode Island College and of Black Studies at Providence
College.
With a passion that supplants the stumblings of aphasia and racial
denials, this book offers elegant analyses to decode, and action to
confront, structural violence. Calls to "end" predatory worlds
demand language that reflects our struggles. With at times brave
and painful sincerity, "Conceptual Aphasia in Black" builds
structure that allows us to speak.
*Joy James, author of Seeking the Beloved Community*
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