Lambert | Black Hopes/Black Woes | Buch | 978-1-032-47350-5 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 244 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 537 g

Reihe: Routledge Research in Race and Ethnicity

Lambert

Black Hopes/Black Woes

Early African American Optimism and 21st Century Afro-Pessimism
1. Auflage 2025
ISBN: 978-1-032-47350-5
Verlag: Routledge

Early African American Optimism and 21st Century Afro-Pessimism

Buch, Englisch, 244 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 537 g

Reihe: Routledge Research in Race and Ethnicity

ISBN: 978-1-032-47350-5
Verlag: Routledge


Black Hopes/Black Woes begins by delving into the contrasting mindsets of postbellum African Americans and their twenty-first-century counterparts, aiming to elucidate the shift from early Black optimism to present-day Black pessimism. It then focuses on the rationale behind Afro-pessimism, a contemporary school of thought with an inconspicuous yet potent influence on mainstream culture.

The first part of the book focuses on Frederick Douglass’s and WEB Du Bois’s interpretations of slave songs, establishing a link between the Negro, freedom, and democracy. This optimistic view is juxtaposed with Saidiya Hartman’s, who, with 100 years’ hindsight, condemns Du Bois’s reformist spirit and efforts to tackle Black poverty as supercilious and damaging. The book then scrutinizes Afro-pessimism through the work of Frank B. Wilderson III, who posits that the stability of civil society hinges on anti-Black violence. Accordingly, he argues that any analogy between Black and non-Black experiences is flawed and that Marxism, which privileges labor over racial issues, is inadequate to grasp Blackness. Additionally, the book explores the essentialist discourse of Afro-pessimism through David Marriott’s analysis of Frantz Fanon, which theorizes the non-beingness of Blackness despite Fanon’s focus on being colonized rather than Black. Finally, the book demonstrates how Afro-pessimism overlaps with postcolonialism and conflicts with Fanon’s universalism, his rejection of identity politics, and his advocacy for transracial and transnational dialogue.

While the radical nature of Afro-pessimism may seem to manifest an unresolved national trauma, Black Hopes/Black Woes situates this ideology in the larger contemporary philosophical and critical discourse, shedding light on its propensity to foster a culture of resentment and cynicism. Once confined to a niche academic audience, Afro-pessimism has percolated the mainstream, stoking the fire of racial antagonism.

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Preface

Introduction

Part I. The Early Negro: A Repository of Freedom and Democracy

Chapter 1. Slave Songs and Their Legacy

Chapter 2. WEB Du Bois vs. Saidiya Hartman: Two Opposite Views of the Negro

Part II. Afro-Pessimism and Its Philosophical Issues

Chapter 3. Frank B. Wilderson’s Afropessimism (2000)

Chapter 4. Blackness and Marxism

Part III. The Fanon Matrix

Chapter 5. Was Frantz Fanon an Afro-Pessimist?

Chapter 6. Hegelian Dialectics, Corpsing, and Stigma

Chapter 7. Fanon/Marriott: Is Wretchedness Blackness?

Chapter 8. Fanonian Sovereignty / Black Sovereignty

Coda. The Postcolonial Connection

Conclusion: Afro-pessimism Goes Mainstream

Appendix

Bibliography

Index


Raphaël Lambert has lived in Japan for over 23 years. He resides in Kyoto and teaches African American literature and culture in the Department of American and British Cultural Studies at Kansai University in Osaka. His book, Narrating the Slave Trade, Theorizing Community (Brill), came out in January 2019. He also published essays in the Journal of Modern Literature, Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, and African American Review. He is coeditor of The African American Novel in the Early Twenty-First Century (Brill), a collection of essays published in December 2024.



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