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Race Matters, Animal Matters challenges one of the grand narratives
of African American studies: that African Americans rejected racist
associations of blackness and animality through a disassociation
from animality. Analyzing canonical texts written by Frederick
Douglass, Charles Chesnutt, Ida B. Wells, and James Weldon Johnson
alongside slaughterhouse lithographs, hunting photography, and
sheep "husbandry" manuals, Lindgren Johnson argues instead for a
critical African American tradition that at pivotal moments
reconsiders and recuperates discourses of animality weaponized
against both African Americans and animals. Johnson articulates a
theory of "fugitive humanism" in which these texts fl ee both white
and human exceptionalism, even as they move within and seek out a
(revised) humanist space. The focus, for example, is not on how
African Americans shake off animal associations in demanding
recognition of their humanity, but on how they hold fast to
animality and animals in making such a move, revising "the human"
itself as they go and undermining the binaries that helped to
produce racial and animal injustices. Fugitive humanism reveals how
an interspecies ethics develops in these African American responses
to violent dehumanization. Illuminating those moments in which the
African American canon exceeds human exceptionalism, Race Matters,
Animal Matters ultimately shows how these black engagements with
animals and animality are not subsequent to efforts for racial
justice - a mere extension of the abolitionist or antilynching
movements- but, to the contrary, are integral to those efforts.
This black- authored temporality challenges widely accepted
humanist approaches to the relationship between racial and animal
justice as it anticipates and even critiques the valuable insights
that animal studies and posthumanism have to offer in our current
moment.
Race Matters, Animal Matters challenges one of the grand narratives
of African American studies: that African Americans rejected racist
associations of blackness and animality through a disassociation
from animality. Analyzing canonical texts written by Frederick
Douglass, Charles Chesnutt, Ida B. Wells, and James Weldon Johnson
alongside slaughterhouse lithographs, hunting photography, and
sheep "husbandry" manuals, Lindgren Johnson argues instead for a
critical African American tradition that at pivotal moments
reconsiders and recuperates discourses of animality weaponized
against both African Americans and animals. Johnson articulates a
theory of "fugitive humanism" in which these texts fl ee both white
and human exceptionalism, even as they move within and seek out a
(revised) humanist space. The focus, for example, is not on how
African Americans shake off animal associations in demanding
recognition of their humanity, but on how they hold fast to
animality and animals in making such a move, revising "the human"
itself as they go and undermining the binaries that helped to
produce racial and animal injustices. Fugitive humanism reveals how
an interspecies ethics develops in these African American responses
to violent dehumanization. Illuminating those moments in which the
African American canon exceeds human exceptionalism, Race Matters,
Animal Matters ultimately shows how these black engagements with
animals and animality are not subsequent to efforts for racial
justice - a mere extension of the abolitionist or antilynching
movements- but, to the contrary, are integral to those efforts.
This black- authored temporality challenges widely accepted
humanist approaches to the relationship between racial and animal
justice as it anticipates and even critiques the valuable insights
that animal studies and posthumanism have to offer in our current
moment.
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