Gender and the Abjection of Blackness

Gender and the Abjection of Blackness
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Artikel-Nr:
9781438470412
Veröffentl:
2018
Seiten:
238
Autor:
Sabine Broeck
Serie:
SUNY series in Gender Theory
eBook Typ:
EPUB
eBook Format:
Reflowable
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

An anti-racist critique of gender studies as a field.
InGender and the Abjection of Blackness, Sabine Broeck argues that gender studies as a mostly white field has taken insufficient account of Black contributions, and that more than being an ethnocentric limitation or blind spot, this has represented a structural anti-Blackness in the field. Engaging with the work of Black feminist authors Sylvia Wynter, Hortense Spillers, and Saidiya Hartman, Broeck critiques a selection of canonical white gender studies texts to make this case. The book discusses this problem at the core of gender theory as a practice which Broeck termsenslavism—the ongoing abjection of Black life which Hartman has called the afterlife of slavery. This has become manifest in the repetitive employment of the "woman as slave" metaphor so central to gender theory, as well as in recent theoretical mutations of these anti-Black politics of analogy. It is the structural separation of Blackness from gender that has functioned over and again as the scaffold enabling white women's struggles for successful recognition of equality and subjectivity in the human world as we know it. This book challenges white readers to rethink their own untroubled identification with gender theory, and it provides all readers with a white feminist theorist's sophisticated theoretical and self-critical scholarly account of her own reckoning with and learning in dialogue from Black feminism's critique.
Acknowledgments

1. Against Gender: Enslavism and the Subjects of Feminism

2. Abolish Property: Black Feminist Struggles against Anti-Blackness

3. Gender and the Grammar of Enslavism

4. Abjective Returns: The Slave’s Fungibility in White Gender Studies

5. Post Gender, Post Human: Braidotti’s Nietzschean Echoes of Anti-Blackness

6. On Dispossession as a False Analogy

Bibliography
Index

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