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
Original, innovative, and thorough. In Narrating Humanity, Cynthia Franklin creates an important new language, and new critical modality, for speaking about narrative and politics, and the relationship of the self to both.---Bill Mullen, author of James Baldwin: Living in Fire