An argument against the narrative of Civil Rights and its figure of the mistreated Black person asking for equal rights in the US. It argues that the Black liberation struggle is and has always been an anti-colonial campaign.
An argument against the narrative of Civil Rights and its figure of the mistreated Black person asking for equal rights in the US. It argues that the Black liberation struggle is and has always been an anti-colonial campaign.
Yannick Giovanni Marshall is a faculty member at California Institute of Arts, USA. An academic and scholar of African Studies, Africana Studies, and Black Studies, he holds an MA in African American Studies and a PhD in Africana Studies from Columbia University, USA. Marshall has published two collections of poetry, regularly contributes editorials and articles to Al Jazeera, Middle East Eye, and Black Perspectives, and has given numerous interviews on race, power, and policing. His writing can be found at yannickgiovannimarshall.net.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Chapter One: At the limit of white sympathy Chapter Two: The Supplicant Negro and the Production of Black Disposability Chapter Three: The Muzzle of Civil Rights Chapter Four: The Cory Booker, MSNBC, Black Lives Matter Problem Conclusion: The Fire is in fact This Time
Introduction Chapter One: At the limit of white sympathy Chapter Two: The Supplicant Negro and the Production of Black Disposability Chapter Three: The Muzzle of Civil Rights Chapter Four: The Cory Booker, MSNBC, Black Lives Matter Problem Conclusion: The Fire is in fact This Time
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