Cynthia G. Franklin is Professor of English at the University of Hawai'i. She coedits the journal Biography and is author of Academic Lives: Memoir, Cultural Theory, and the University Today (2009), as well as Writing Women's Communities: The Politics and Poetics of Multi Genre Anthologies (1994).
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Preface and Acknowledgments ix Introduction: The Human in Crisis 1 PART I: NARRATIVE HUMANITY 1 Love and Terror: Formulas of Citizenship in Zeitoun and Trouble the Water 33 2 Criminals and Kinship: Fruitvale Station, Between the World and Me, and Black Selfhood in the Age of BLM 68 PART II: NARRATED HUMANITY 3 From Movement to Memoir: When They Call You a Terrorist and the Power of Queer Black Kinship 109 4 "Nursing Visions of the Unimagined": BDS and Steven Salaita's World-Making Narratives of Fatherhood, Affiliation, and Freedom 144 PART III: NARRATED HUMANITY AND GROUNDED NARRATIVE HUMANITY 5 "E Hu e" (Rising Like a Mighty Wave): Mauna Kea and the Movement beyond the Human 187 Postscript: Hope, Joy, and "The Struggle for Ea" 231 Notes 237 Works Cited 255 Index 283

