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Fear of Black Consciousness

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Fear of Black Consciousness

By: Lewis R. Gordon
Narrated by: Landon Woodson, Lewis R. Gordon
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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

A pioneering philosopher explores how racial identity is constructed - and experienced - through history, art and popular culture

'There is a movement from a suffering black consciousness to a liberatory Black consciousness in which revelation of the dirty laundry and fraud of white supremacy and black inferiority is a dreaded truth'

Lewis Gordon, one of the leading scholars of Black Existentialism, has spent decades nurturing intellectual reflection as a vital component of ongoing activism for racial justice around the world. In this boldly original book, he delves into history, art, politics and popular culture to show how the process of racialization - and its absence - affects not only how individuals and society perceive black people but also how black people perceive themselves.

Fear of Black Consciousness traces the ways in which the lived experience of black people has been rendered invisible in the Western world and the breadth of rich cultural expression that encapsulates the truth nonetheless - from ancient African languages to films such as Get Out and Black Panther. Gordon offers a stunning philosophical and social critique while highlighting the fundamental role of Black people as agents of history and of the social change required to build a humane world of dignity, freedom and respect.

© Lewis R. Gordon 2022 (P) Penguin Audio 2022

Movements Philosophy Political Science Politics & Government Society Social justice Social change Superhero Colonial Period

Critic Reviews

Lewis Gordon's expansive philosophical engagement with the current moment - its histories and globalities, its politics and protests, its visual and sonic cultures - reminds us that the ultimate aim of Black freedom quests is, indeed, universal liberation (Angela Y. Davis)
Powerful . . . one of the most prominent scholars of racism, tries to enrich our knowledge with his unique brand of intellectual precision and analysis (Kehinde Andrews)
Gordon's surprising observations crack open the mind to connect various creative disciplines (Vanessa Willoughby)
Reading Fear of Black Consciousness had me nodding so often and so vigorously, I got a mild case of whiplash . . . With surgical precision, laser sharp wit, and the eye of an artist, Lewis Gordon doesn't just dissect race, racism, and racial thinking but offers a clarion call to embrace Black Consciousness, to take political responsibility for decolonizing and transforming the world as it is (Robin D G Kelley)
A thinker whose reflections on race have produced singular illuminations on our times . . . he draws on a wide range of colonial histories, African popular culture, aboriginal histories, contemporary films and stories, to show the critical powers of creativity in dismantling racism by the making of Black consciousness, the making of a world where breath and love and existence become possible (Judith Butler)
Striking... You will want Lewis Gordon's Fear of Black Consciousness among your primary intellectual road supplies for the future (Hortense Spillers)
As atrocity, injury, white supremacy, and racial violence loom, Gordon holds steady a Fanonian outlook, theorizing black consciousness as the realization of possibility - that is, a sustained political commitment that recalculates the stakes of freedom (Katherine McKittrick)
A resolute response to the ongoing pessimism . . . Gordon seamlessly weaves together discussions of contemporary and historical Western philosophers such as Gabriel Marcel and Friedrich Nietzsche with his analyses of film, music, culture, and more . . . Sprinkled with personal stories, witty anecdotes, and powerful arguments, the book encourages readers to rethink historical descriptions of anti-black violence as well as the vocabulary used to talk about race and racism today. (Edward O'Byrn)
All stars
Most relevant
An incredible book that engages the listener in the present by weaving the past and the future into an easily digestible philosophical journey into ethnic identity tity struggles.
A must listen for anyone wanting to break free from normative paradigms of the other, to dive deeper into how we construct our racist narratives and ultimately how we remained our own agency.
Superb!
Lewis has done a magnificent job with this audio book, so much so, that I have had to lurches the hard copy as well.

Contemporary Philosophy

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