City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

The future is Black, Afropessimism, fugitivity, and radical hope in education, edited by Carl A. Grant, Ashley N. Woodson, and Michael J. Dumas

Label
The future is Black, Afropessimism, fugitivity, and radical hope in education, edited by Carl A. Grant, Ashley N. Woodson, and Michael J. Dumas
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The future is Black
Nature of contents
bibliography
Responsibility statement
edited by Carl A. Grant, Ashley N. Woodson, and Michael J. Dumas
Sub title
Afropessimism, fugitivity, and radical hope in education
Summary
The Future is Black presents Afropessimism as an opportunity to think in provocative and disruptive ways about race, racial equality, multiculturalism, and the pursuit of educational justice. The vision is not a coherent, delimited conversation, but a series of experiences with Afropessimism as a radical analytic situated within critical Black studies. Activists, educators, caregivers, kin and all those who love Black children are invited to make sense of the contemporary Black condition, including a theorization of Black suffering, Black fugitivity, and Black futurity. These three concepts provide the foundation for the book`s inquiry, and contribute to the examination of Black educational opportunity, experience, and outcomes. The book not only explores how schooling becomes complicit in, and serves as a site of Black material and psychic suffering, but also examines the possibilities of education as a site of fugitivity, of hope, of escape, and as a space within which to imagine an emancipation yet to be realized
Table Of Contents
Afropessimism and fugitivity -- Afropessimism for us in education : in fugitivity, through fuckery and with funk -- Literate slave, fugitive slave : a note on the ethical dilemma of Black education -- On labor and property : historically white colleges, Black bodies, and constructions of (anti) humanity -- Black space in education : fugitive resistance in the afterlife of school segregation -- Anti-blackness is equilibrium : how "disparity" logics pathologize Black male bodies and render other Black bodies invisible -- Conceptual considerations -- Radical hope, education and humanity -- Anti-blackness and the school curriculum -- Kissing cousins : critical race theory's racial realism and Afro-pessimism's social death -- Research vignettes -- Seeking resistance and rupture in "the wake" : locating ripples of hope in the futures of Black boys -- Knowledge and power : a case study on anti-blackness within schooling -- Debating while Black : wake work in Black youth politics -- Making the world go dark : the radical (im)possibilities of youth organizing in the afterlife of slavery
resource.variantTitle
Afropessimism, fugitivity, and radical hope in education
Classification
Content