Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781479828289 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

Jump

Black Anarchism and Antiblack Carcerality
Description
Author
Biography
Reviews
Google
Preview
Asks how we can better understand a politics of refusal Writing a new story of Black politics, Jump emerges from the practice of enslaved Africans jumping overboard off their slavers' ships. Reading against the narrative that depoliticizes and denigrates the leaps of the enslaved as merely suicidal symptoms of chattel slavery and the Middle Passage, Sam C. Tenorio demonstrates how bringing these jumps to bear on the foundations of Black politics allows us to rethink a politics of refusal. In a period of increasing political mobilization against police brutality and mass incarceration, Jump attends to the layers of confinement that constitute the racial and gendered hierarchies of the antiblack world. Centering radical acts too often relegated to the periphery of Black politics, Tenorio proposes a Black anarchist politics of refusal that helps us to think dissent anew. Tracing iterations of the jump through the carceral wake of the slave ship, Tenorio explores the voyages of the Black Star Line in defiance of the bordered authority of the nation state, the Watts Rebellion of 1965 against the property relation of ghettoization, and Assata Shakur's abscondence from prison to Cuba. Ultimately, Tenorio argues that considering the jump as a progenitor of Black politics deepens and widens our conceptualization of the Black radical tradition and introduces a paradigm-shifting attention to Black anarchism.
Sam C. Tenorio is Assistant Professor in the Department of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and the Department of African American Studies at The Pennsylvania State University.
"Jump is one of those books that will intellectually and politically ignite you. Tenorio burrows rigorously, anarchically into the multivalent practice of the enslaved jumping overboard as a sustained effort of black dissent and refusal and, too, anarchism. Jump, then, is an investigation into this practice, moving from the slave ship's jumpers as practitioners of anarchism to the ways abscondence and secrecy articulate a not-yet-seen glimpse into black liberation. The magic of unabsorbable black life-as difficult and under siege as it may be-serves as a rejoinder to the anti-political logic of antiblackness. Tenorio gifts us an uncovering of this magic." * Marquis Bey, author of Black Trans Feminism *
Google Preview content