Buch, Englisch, 544 Seiten, Print PDF, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 912 g
Race and Radicalism in the Age of Atlantic Slavery
Buch, Englisch, 544 Seiten, Print PDF, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 912 g
ISBN: 978-0-19-007779-2
Verlag: Oxford University Press
How did an ancient mythological figure who stole fire from the gods become a face of the modern, lending his name to trailblazing spaceships and radical publishing outfits alike? How did Prometheus come to represent a notion of civilizational progress through revolution--scientific, political, and spiritual--and thereby to center nothing less than a myth of modernity itself ? The answer Black Prometheus gives is that certain features of the myth--its geographical associations, iconography of bodily suffering, and function as a limit case in a long tradition of absolutist political theology--made it ripe for revival and reinvention in a historical moment in which freedom itself was racialized, in what was the Age both of Atlantic revolution and Atlantic slavery. Contained in the various incarnations of the modern Prometheus--whether in Mary Shelley's esoteric novel, Frankenstein, Denmark Vesey's real-world recruitment of slave rebels, or popular travelogues representing Muslim jihadists against the Russian empire in the Caucasus-- is
a profound debate about the means and ends of liberation in our globalized world. Tracing the titan's rehabilitation and unprecedented exaltation in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries across a range of genres and geographies turns out to provide a way to rethink the relationship between race, religion, and modernity and to interrogate the Eurocentric and secularist assumptions of our deepest intellectual traditions of critique.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction Black Prometheus: Race and Radicalism in the Age of Atlantic Slavery
- Chapter 1 Globalization and the Gods: A Theory of Race and--or as--Modernity
- Chapter 2 The Terms of Prometheus's Liberation: Romanticism, Slavery, and the Titan's Triumph
- Chapter 3 Africa versus the Absolute Idealism and Its Others
- Chapter 4 The Afro-Promethean "Science of the Stars"
- Chapter 5 Re-binding Prometheus to the Caucasus: Idealism's Other Solution
- Chapter 6 Imam Shamil or, the Modern Prometheus of Caucasus
- Chapter 7 Rebellious Fictions: Black Prometheus and the Undoing of the Novelistic Form
- Chapter 8 Byronic Abolitionism
- Index




