Struggle on Their Minds
eBook - ePub

Struggle on Their Minds

The Political Thought of African American Resistance

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eBook - ePub

Struggle on Their Minds

The Political Thought of African American Resistance

Book details
Table of contents
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About This Book

American political thought has been shaped by those who fought back against social inequality, economic exclusion, the denial of political representation, and slavery, the country's original sin. Yet too often the voices of African American resistance have been neglected, silenced, or forgotten. In this timely book, Alex Zamalin considers key moments of resistance to demonstrate its current and future necessity, focusing on five activists across two centuries who fought to foreground slavery and racial injustice in American political discourse. Struggle on Their Minds shows how the core values of the American political tradition have been continually challenged—and strengthened—by antiracist resistance, creating a rich legacy of African American political thought that is an invaluable component of contemporary struggles for racial justice.

Zamalin looks at the language and concepts put forward by the abolitionists David Walker and Frederick Douglass, the antilynching activist Ida B. Wells, the Black Panther Party organizer Huey Newton, and the prison abolitionist Angela Davis. Each helped revise and transform ideas about power, justice, community, action, and the role of emotion in political action. Their thought encouraged abolitionists to call for the eradication of slavery, black journalists to chastise American institutions for their indifference to lynching, and black radicals to police the police and to condemn racial injustice in the American prison system. Taken together, these movements pushed political theory forward, offering new language and concepts to sustain democracy in tense times. Struggle on Their Minds is a critical text for our contemporary moment, showing how the political thought that comes out of resistance can energize the practice of democratic citizenship and ultimately help address the prevailing problem of racial injustice.

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Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. List of Illustrations
  7. Acknowledgments
  8. Introduction: The Political Thought of African American Resistance
  9. 1. David Walker, Frederick Douglass, and the Abolitionist Democratic Vision
  10. 2. Ida B. Wells, the Antilynching Movement, and the Politics of Seeing
  11. 3. Huey Newton, the Black Panthers, and the Decolonization of America
  12. 4. Angela Davis, Prison Abolition, and the End of the American Carceral State
  13. Conclusion: The Future of Resistance
  14. Notes
  15. Bibliography
  16. Index