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In Black Life Matter, Biko Mandela Gray offers a philosophical
eulogy for Aiyana Stanley-Jones, Tamir Rice, Alton Sterling, and
Sandra Bland that attests to their irreducible significance in the
face of unremitting police brutality. Gray employs a theoretical
method he calls "sitting-with"-a philosophical practice of care
that seeks to defend the dead and the living. He shows that the
police who killed Stanley-Jones and Rice reduced them to their
bodies in ways that turn black lives into tools that the state uses
to justify its violence and existence. He outlines how Bland's
arrest and death reveal the affective resonances of blackness, and
he contends that Sterling's physical movement and speech before he
was killed point to black flesh as unruly living matter that
exceeds the constraints of the black body. These four black lives,
Gray demonstrates, were more than the brutal violence enacted
against them; they speak to a mode of life that cannot be fully
captured by the brutal logics of antiblackness.
This book sheds light on the phenomenon of white rage, and maps out
the uneasy relationship between white anxiety, religious fervour,
American identity and perceived black racial progress. Contributors
to the volume examine the sociological construct of the "white
labourer", whose concerns and beliefs can be understood as
religious in foundation, and uncover that white religious fervor
correlates to notions of perceived white loss and perceived black
progress. In discussions ranging from the Constitution to the
Charlottesville riots to the evangelical community's uncritical
support for Trump, the authors of this collection argue that it is
not economics but religion and race that stand as the primary
motivating factors for the rise of white rage and white supremacist
sentiment in the United States.
In Black Life Matter, Biko Mandela Gray offers a philosophical
eulogy for Aiyana Stanley-Jones, Tamir Rice, Alton Sterling, and
Sandra Bland that attests to their irreducible significance in the
face of unremitting police brutality. Gray employs a theoretical
method he calls "sitting-with"-a philosophical practice of care
that seeks to defend the dead and the living. He shows that the
police who killed Stanley-Jones and Rice reduced them to their
bodies in ways that turn black lives into tools that the state uses
to justify its violence and existence. He outlines how Bland's
arrest and death reveal the affective resonances of blackness, and
he contends that Sterling's physical movement and speech before he
was killed point to black flesh as unruly living matter that
exceeds the constraints of the black body. These four black lives,
Gray demonstrates, were more than the brutal violence enacted
against them; they speak to a mode of life that cannot be fully
captured by the brutal logics of antiblackness.
This book sheds light on the phenomenon of white rage, and maps out
the uneasy relationship between white anxiety, religious fervour,
American identity and perceived black racial progress. Contributors
to the volume examine the sociological construct of the "white
labourer", whose concerns and beliefs can be understood as
religious in foundation, and uncover that white religious fervor
correlates to notions of perceived white loss and perceived black
progress. In discussions ranging from the Constitution to the
Charlottesville riots to the evangelical community's uncritical
support for Trump, the authors of this collection argue that it is
not economics but religion and race that stand as the primary
motivating factors for the rise of white rage and white supremacist
sentiment in the United States.
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