Black Iconoclasm: Public Symbols, Racial Progress, and Post/Ferguson America

Athanasopoulos, Charles

  • 出版商: Palgrave MacMillan
  • 出版日期: 2024-09-04
  • 售價: $5,410
  • 貴賓價: 9.5$5,140
  • 語言: 英文
  • 頁數: 235
  • 裝訂: Hardcover - also called cloth, retail trade, or trade
  • ISBN: 3031669231
  • ISBN-13: 9783031669231
  • 下單後立即進貨 (約1週~2週)

商品描述

In the decade since the 2014 Ferguson Uprising, re-intensified conversations about racial progress continue to be at the forefront of American culture. The moniker Black Lives Matter, for example, emerged as a rallying cry of Black-led mass rebellions calling into question the rigid Western social codes of race, gender, class, and sexuality. These values emerge through iconography: those social codes reflected by a corresponding rolodex of public symbols (whether positive or negative) in American culture. Black Lives Matter fractured icons such as the first Black president, the innocent police officer, and the charismatic Black male activist opening space for new theories and practices of Black radical disruption. At the same time, groups such as #BLM10, BLM Grassroots, and Mass Action for Black Liberation criticize the Black Lives Matter Global Network as having transformed into a new icon of racial progress, demonstrating that the meaning of Black liberation remains hotly contested. How do we discern Black radical thought and activism from the co-options of Western Man? Are we doomed to repeat a cycle of destroying a few icons only to inevitably produce new ones? In Black Iconoclasm, Charles Athanasopoulos dismantles the Eurocentric notion of iconoclasm as the physical destruction of icons and/or the recovery of supposedly pure counter-ideologies. Instead, Black iconoclasm refers to a liminal orientation toward cracks and fissures in narratives of linear racial progress and teleological narratives of Black liberation.

Athanasopoulos examines conflicting messages surrounding Black liberation in post/Ferguson America across activism, Black radical theory, communicative situations, cinema, and street art. Across each arena of American culture, his orientation toward the liminal unsettles the supposed cyclical nature of icons/iconoclasm by demonstrating that theories and practices of Black radical disruption always reflect both Black radical excess and the iconographic residues of Western Man. Those residues do not preclude those theories/practices from teaching us important lessons, they are how those lessons are learned to evolve our theories and practices of Black radical disruption. Institutional capture is neither simply inevitable just as no movement, person, or idea will be totally immune to Western Man's racial icons. Thus, Black iconoclasm eschews purity politics and the pursuit of epistemological closure in favor of a critical orientation toward ritual transgression and Black radical discernment. Reframing iconoclasm in this way, Athanasopoulos opens avenues for new approaches to the relationship between Black resistance and the co-option of that resistance.

商品描述(中文翻譯)

在2014年費格森騷亂後的十年間,關於種族進步的對話重新加強,持續成為美國文化的前沿話題。例如,標語「Black Lives Matter」成為由黑人主導的大規模反抗運動的號召,質疑西方社會在種族、性別、階級和性取向方面的僵化社會規範。這些價值觀透過圖像學展現出來:這些社會規範反映在美國文化中一系列相應的公共符號(無論是正面還是負面)。「Black Lives Matter」打破了如首位黑人總統、無辜的警察以及富有魅力的黑人男性活動家等象徵,為黑人激進破壞的新理論和實踐開辟了空間。與此同時,像#BLM10、BLM Grassroots和Mass Action for Black Liberation等團體批評「Black Lives Matter Global Network」已轉變為一個新的種族進步象徵,顯示出黑人解放的意義仍然存在激烈的爭論。我們如何區分黑人激進思想和行動與西方人的共謀?我們是否注定要重複摧毀幾個象徵的循環,卻不可避免地產生新的象徵?在《Black Iconoclasm》中,查爾斯·阿塔納索普洛斯拆解了以歐洲中心主義為基礎的偶像破壞觀念,這種觀念將偶像的物理摧毀和所謂純粹的反對意識形態的恢復視為偶像破壞。相反,黑人偶像破壞指的是對於線性種族進步敘事和黑人解放的目的論敘事中的裂縫和缺口的邊緣取向。

阿塔納索普洛斯考察了在後費格森美國中圍繞黑人解放的矛盾信息,涵蓋了行動主義、黑人激進理論、交流情境、電影和街頭藝術。在美國文化的每個領域中,他對邊緣的取向動搖了偶像/偶像破壞的所謂循環性,顯示出黑人激進破壞的理論和實踐始終反映出黑人激進的過度和西方人的圖像殘留。這些殘留並不妨礙這些理論/實踐教會我們重要的課題,它們是我們如何學習這些課題以發展我們的黑人激進破壞理論和實踐。制度性捕獲並非簡單的必然,正如沒有任何運動、個人或思想會完全免疫於西方人的種族偶像。因此,黑人偶像破壞避免了純粹政治和對認識論結束的追求,而是偏向於對儀式性越界和黑人激進辨識的批判取向。以這種方式重新框架偶像破壞,阿塔納索普洛斯為黑人抵抗與該抵抗的共謀之間的關係開辟了新的途徑。

作者簡介

Charles Athanasopoulos is Assistant Professor of African American and African Studies & English at The Ohio State University (USA). He received his Ph.D. in Rhetoric & Communication from the University of Pittsburgh, and his research interests lie at the intersection of Black rhetorics, media, and culture. He has published numerous peer reviewed articles in venues such as Lateral: The Journal of the Cultural Studies Association and the Western Journal of Communication.

作者簡介(中文翻譯)

查爾斯·阿塔納索普洛斯(Charles Athanasopoulos)是美國俄亥俄州立大學(The Ohio State University)非裔美國人與非洲研究及英語的助理教授。他在匹茲堡大學(University of Pittsburgh)獲得修辭與傳播(Rhetoric & Communication)博士學位,研究興趣位於黑人修辭、媒體與文化的交集。他在《Lateral: The Journal of the Cultural Studies Association》和《Western Journal of Communication》等期刊上發表了多篇經過同行評審的文章。