Introduction
1. Neoliberal Violence
2. Race, Patriarchy, and the Politics of Women's Protection
3. Punitive Feminism, an Impasse
Conclusion - For a Decolonial Feminist Politics
Notes
Françoise Vergès is a political scientist, activist, historian,
film writer, and public educator. She is the author of A Decolonial
Feminism, A Feminist History of Violence and A Programme of
Absolute Disorder. She is also a senior research fellow at the
Sarah Parker Remond Centre for the Study of Racism and
Racialisation, University College London. She lives in Paris.
Melissa Thackway is an independent researcher and translator. She
lectures in African Cinema at Sciences-Po and INALCO in Paris. Her
recent translations include A Feminist Theory of Violence by
Françoise Vergès, Contemporary African Cinema by Olivier
Barlet, Tropical Dream Palaces: Cinema-Going in Colonial West
Africa by Odile Goerg and African Diasporic Cinema: Aesthetics of
Reconstruction by Daniela Ricci.
'In this robust, decolonial challenge to carceral feminism,
Francoise Vergès elucidates why a structural approach to violence
is needed. If we wish to understand how racial capitalism is linked
to the proliferation of intimate and state violence directed at
women and gender-nonconforming people, we need to look no further
than Vergès' timely analysis'
*Angela Y. Davis, Distinguished Professor Emerita, University of
California, Santa Cruz*
'A powerful and uncompromising text … A stunning reflection on the
recurrence of assault – gender-based, sexual, racial violence'
*'Terrafemina'*
'An important and courageous book, which raises difficult questions
and uncovers invisible structures of domination'
*'Trou Noir'*
'Vergès's incandescent writing casts a light on the global
inequalities, brutal carceral systems, unfettered militarisation
and punitive ideologies that shape violent intimacies'
*Laleh Khalili, Professor of International Politics, Queen Mary
University of London*
'A call to join in the urgent decolonial feminist work of
rethinking the practices of (so-called) protection outside of the
logics of violence. We have the ability, Vergès insists, to enact a
post violent society, to bring another world into being'
*Christina Sharpe, Canada Research Chair in Black Studies in the
Humanities at York University, Toronto and author of 'In the Wake:
On Blackness and Being'*
'A road map of radical emancipatory imaginaries for shaping urgent
social and political change. Vergès' arguments rise from the ground
up, from the lived experience of grassroots dissent, action and
mobilisation against the wounds and damages inflicted by extractive
capitalism across the world'
*Rasha Salti, curator of art and film*
'Françoise Vergès asks a simple question: what actually is the
politics of protection? What she reveals is a paradigm spinning
analysis. Once she establishes the perspective of people without
power, the 'protection' offered by the state and the meta-state of
global capital, is exposed as a killing machine of enforcement and
endless punishment. A door opening work'
*Sarah Schulman, author of 'The Gentrification of the Mind' and
'Let the Records Show: A Political History of ACT UP'*
‘Vergès’ book avoids both the trap of disavowing the feminist
project entirely while refusing to ally herself with the
destructive, ongoing elite capture of feminist politics ... the
book performs a necessary cataloging function and offers an
international perspective for English-language readers tempted
toward American chauvinism in the fight against global racial
capitalism’
*‘The New Inquiry’*
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