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Existence in Black: An Anthology of Black Existential Philosophy
Existence in Black: An Anthology of Black Existential Philosophy
Author: Gordon, Lewis R. (Ed.)
Edition/Copyright: 1997
ISBN: 0-415-91451-5
Publisher: Routledge N. Y.
Type: Print On Demand
Used Print:  $46.50
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Summary
 
  Review

"Lewis Gordon has edited an impressive anthology within a specialized area of philosophy ... [T]his is a great resource."

--Catholic Library World

Routledge Web Site, May, 2000

 
  Summary

Existence in Black is the first collective statement on the subject of Africana Philosophy of Existence. Drawing upon resources in Africana philosophy and literature, the contributors explore some of the central themes of Existentialism as posed by the context of what Frantz Fanon has identified as "the lived-experience of the black."

Among questions posed and explored in the volume are: What is to be done in a world of near universal sense of superiority to, if not universal hatred of, black folk?; What is black suffering?; What is the meaning (if any) of black existence? The introduction argues that a response to these questions requires a journey through the resources of identity questions in critical race theory and the teleological dimensions of liberation theory.

The contributors address these questions through an analysis of nearly every dimension of Africana philosophy. In the first half of the book, they address Black Philosophies of Existence in terms of Traditional African Philosophy, the Harlem Renaissance, Du Boisian Double-Consciousness, and Fanonian and Sartrean Philosophies of Existence. In the second half of the book, contributors consider racial identity through examinations of such concepts as equality, death, mimesis, property, embodiment, technology, disappointment, and dread. Part II is an exploration of postmodern challenges to "black existence" through discussions of postmodern conservatism, Nietzsche's thoughts on blacks, Richard Wright and fragmented consciousness, and feminist critiques of race. And Part IV is an examination of problems of historical responsibility and constructing black liberation theories.

 

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