Lena Zuckerwise is Associate Professor of Political Science at Simmons University.
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Description
A Note on Terminology and Method xi Introduction: Politics in Motion 1 1. From Plantations to Prisons 25 2. Black Carceral Political Thought 44 3. Historical and Theoretical Erasures of Slave Resistance 64 4. The Racial Limits of Liberalism 83 5. The Concept of World 110 6. Politics in Captivity 135 7. Beyond Democracy: The Attica Prison Uprising 164 Epilogue 185 Acknowledgments 189 Notes 195 Bibliography 251 Index 277
A remarkable achievement. The voices of the enslaved and contemporary captives routinely elide pundits. Politics in Captivity provocatively bucks this tendency. Working at the intersections of Black political thought, African American intellectual history, carceral political theory, and, however surprising, the ideas of Hannah Arendt, Lena Zuckerwise boldly unsettles the destructive/productive binary to lay claim to Afromodern visions of worldlessness and world-building that view the materialization of freedom in generative acts of destruction.---Neil Roberts, Williams College

