Fumi Okiji is Associate Professor of Rhetoric at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of Jazz as Critique: Adorno and Black Expression Revisited (Stanford, 2018). She arrived at the academy by way of the London jazz scene and draws on sound practices to inform her writing.
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"It's not just that Okiji places study of and in the ongoing cosmological, ecological, topographical, and poethical experiment of The Music on a new footing; she also radicalizes and exacerbates the displacements that make up study's general attitude." -Fred Moten, New York University "In this exorbitantly questioning book, Okiji sings and swoons through a set of classic standards: mimesis, dialectics, art, indeterminacy. She offers up these songs of Black life as if she had the world's ear, and I believe that she will." -Benjamin Piekut, Cornell University "Okiji's generous solo provocatively adds to the chorus that is contemporary Black Thought an intervention in critical theory which, exploring beyond the confines of the practice, dares and excavates its potentially generative gifts." -Denise Ferreira da Silva, New York University

