INFO: New Items of Interest

New Book:

Nigel Gibson’s

Fanonian Practices

Nigel Gibson’s Fanonian Practices in South Africa: From Steve Biko to Abahlali baseMjondolo will be published by Palgrave/MacMillan this summer. Written by a leading Fanon scholar, Fanonian Practices has been described as “a sophisticated attempt to examine post-apartheid South Africa through the emancipatory lens of Frantz Fanon’s revolutionary humanism.” 

Description: South Africa has been widely heralded as an African success story in the wake of the 1994 democratic elections. But in recent years the world’s media have too often carried stark images of South African police attacking protestors or scenes of xenophobic violence. Has post-apartheid South Africa been unable to chart a course away from the all too familiar script of a postcolonial crisis, rooted in the narrow nationalism and neocolonialism that Fanon so vividly described?

This is not another meditation on Fanon’s continued relevance. Instead, it is an inquiry into how Fanon, the revolutionary, might think and act in the face of contemporary social crises. Taking Fanon’s passion for freedom and liberation seriously, and Biko’s analysis of the dangers of liberalism, Fanonian Practices looks into the politics of the shack-dweller movements currently gathering momentum in South Africa as important spaces in which to think and construct a truly humane post-apartheid future

Nigel C. Gibson is director of the Honors Program at Emerson College, where he teaches postcolonial, global and African studies, and a visiting research fellow at the School of Development Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal. His many published works include Fanon: The Postcolonial Imagination, which won the 2009 Caribbean Philosophical Association’s Frantz Fanon Prize.

[Many thanks to the Caribbean Philosophical Association for bringing this item to our attention.]

For more information, see http://ukznpress.book.co.za/blog/2011/02/11/forthcoming-fanonian-practices-in-south-africa-by-nigel-gibson/

For an interview with Nigel Gibson, see http://ukznpress.book.co.za/blog/2011/04/19/interview-with-fanonian-practices-in-south-africa-author-nigel-gibson/

 

__________________________

 

 

 

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Magazine Transition 105

- Blacks, Jews, and Black Jews


The American magazine Transition 105, of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute, is teeming with thorny questions about being black in a global context. 

Even the “Black-Jewish Question,” traditionally an American obsession, gains complexity when it involves a half-Kenyan president, Israel, or Igbo Jews celebrating Hanukkah in Abuja. Three writers explore three different intersections of the tribe and the people. 

And the issue follows several more journeys through the Diaspora in search of black meaning. A review of the new biography of Marcus Garvey, transatlantic hero, celebrates ties between Africa and the Americas, just as Bayo Holsey questions Wole Soyinka’s reading of Africa’s role in the slave trade. 

And amid these abstract tides of history, pushing back and forth, individuals are caught in small eddies: an African American anthropologist visits Brazil and has trouble getting back home; an American daughter of South African parents floats like a ghost between different cultures of death; a black writer can’t quite find home in Harlem. With the idea of home in transition, at least all these ideas find a home in Transition.

Born in Africa and bred in the Diaspora, Transition is a unique forum for the freshest, most compelling, most curious ideas about race. Since its founding in 1961, the magazine has kept apace of the rapid transformation of the black world and has remained a leading forum of intellectual debate. Now, in an age that demands ceaseless improvisation, we aim to be both an anchor of deep reflection on black life and a map charting new routes through the globalized world. 

For more information go http://dubois.fas.harvard.edu/transition-105

>via: http://afroeurope.blogspot.com/2011/06/magazine-transition-105-blacks-jews-an...

 

__________________________

 

MaComère Journal

Women Writers & Scholars, are pleased to announce that full contents
of past issues (1998-2009) are available online at the Digital Library
of the Caribbean:

http://dloc.com/AA00000079/00002/allvolumes2.

Access to full contents is via delayed open access, with an embargo on
the contents of issues published in the last two years.

dLOC patrons are invited to subscribe to the journal to gain access to
full contents of current issues. MaComère is published twice per year
in June/July and December/January. Interested parties can subscribe
individually or request that their libraries subscribe to the journal.
Subscription information is available at the journal’s website:
www.macomerejournal.com

Current issues are Volume 12.1 (2010) “Resistant Genealogies,” and
Volume 12.2 (2010), a special issue titled “Women & National Political
Struggles in the Caribbean.” Volume 13.1 (2011) on “Women and Theatre
in the Caribbean” will be available this summer.

>via: http://blackatlanticresource.wordpress.com/2011/06/27/macomere-journal/

__________________________

 New Book:

 “Claudia Jones: Beyond Containment”

Carole Boyce Davies is the editor of a new book entitled Claudia Jones: Beyond Containment. Here’s the publisher’s description of the text:

Claudia Jones was a smart, politically-wise, brilliant, transnational feminist, Pan Africanist theorist and cultural activist who brought together in her speeches and writings the politics that is now seen as a necessary way of intersecting a variety of political fields and positions. Known as the founder of the first London carnival and the editor of the first black newspaper the West Indian Gazette in England, Claudia Jones’s activism bridged US and the UK with the black world politics of decolonization that ushered in contemporary community empowerment. For the first time, in one place, Claudia Jones Beyond Containment… brings together her essays, poetry, autobiographical and longer writings, expanding our knowledge of several fields. Providing us with the clarity of the ideas of a black woman activist-intellectual of her period, for a fuller understanding of Caribbean, African American and the larger African Diaspora discourses. Claudia Jones Beyond Containment is essential reading.

 
Advanced reviews:
‘Claudia Jones is one of my personal heroines. I spent my formative political years in Claudia Jones’s London stamping ground of Notting Hill – it was the classic centre of post-war black activism in Britain. Most West Indian immigrants in the 1950s came by boat to Southampton and the train from there took them into Paddington. Hence the large black community in that part of West London. So I know people who had worked with Claudia Jones and spoke of her with awe. She founded two of Black Britain’s most important institutions; the first black newspaper, the West Indian Gazette and she was also one of the founding organizers of the Notting Hill Carnival.

 
The ‘hidden history’ of women’s contribution to progressive politics has been concealed for too long. This important book is part of the process of putting that right. Claudia Jones was an iconic figure who inspired a generation of black activists and deserves to be much more widely known. This book is a fitting memorial.’
Diane Abbott, MP, Westminster, London.

 
Claudia Jones: Beyond Containment transcends the silencing and erasure historically accorded women of achievement: it makes accessible and brings to wider attention the words of an often   overlooked twentieth-century political and cultural activist, who tirelessly campaigned, wrote, spoke out, organized, edited and published autobiographical writings, poetry, essays on subjects close to her political heart – human rights, peace, struggle related to gender, race and class – this is a collection that unites the many facets of a woman whose identities as a radical thinker and as a black woman are not in conflict.

 
Carole Boyce Davies, author of the acclaimed Left of Karl Marx: The Political Life of Black Communist Claudia Jones (2008), continues the task of ensuring that Claudia Jones takes her rightful place in the exalted list of twentieth-century Caribbean intellectuals in the Diaspora, including her compatriots George Padmore and C.L.R. James, who engaged with the world to make it a more enlightened place and whose legacy still deserves to resonate.’
Margaret Busby, OBE, Writer, Broadcaster and Journalist, London.

 
‘Carole Boyce Davies’s brilliant book, Left of Karl Marx, did so much more than recover the life and legacy of Claudia Jones.  She threw down the gauntlet, forcing us to rethink many of the  fundamental assumptions and conceits of Marxism and to come to terms with Claudia Jones’s radical critiques of racism, women’s oppression and colonial rule. But Davies isn’t done. In this stunning collection of Jones’s essays, speeches, autobiographical reflections and poems, Davies not only underscores why Jones stands among the world’s most important radical theorists and organizers of the 20th century, but she reveals the Trinidadian-born, transnational intellectual as artist and visionary.’
Robin D. G. Kelly, Professor of American Studies and Ethnicity, University of Southern Carolina and author of Freedom Dreams: The Back Radical Imagination.

 
Claudia Jones: Beyond Containment lifts veils of ignorance and erasure that obscure a brilliant, 20th century human rights advocate. With this Collection of Jones’s writings, Carole Boyce Davies provides the 21st century with an important opportunity to revisit our collective histories and current struggles shaped by feminist, anti-racist, communist Claudia Jones, a Caribbean-born activist and intellectual who influenced international struggles of blacks, women and workers for social justice.’
Joy James, Williams College, USA and author of Shadowboxing: Representations of Black Feminist Politics.

 
‘In Claudia Jones: Beyond Containment, Carole Boyce Davies has uncovered a super-excellent collection…. commendable not only for their breadth-of-scope but largely also for their intellectual sharpness and acuity…. while all based on past events these writings are so very directly relevant today, especially in the manner in which they assist our understanding of contemporary world politics with the US and the Anglo-American bloc playing a leading role. Indeed, Jones’s interventions are as deep and relevant as to provide a direct prognosis of contemporary US imperialism in the era of globalization. There can be absolutely no doubt that Jones was an activist and an ideologue, who used and tirelessly mobilized her identity as a member of the Young Communist League and other organizations to help in the fight to establish a new, more just, equitable and humanitarian social order.’
Dr Kwadwo Osei-Nyame Jnr., Lecturer in African Studies, School of Oriental & African Studies, (SOAS), University of London.

>via: http://repeatingislands.com/2011/07/01/new-book-“claudia-jones-beyond-containment”/