The Always Already of Anti-Blackness -- Sara Morais dos Santos Bruss Interviews Jaye Austin Williams
Document Type
Contribution to Book
Source Publication
The Minor on the Move : Doing Cosmopolitanisms
Link to Published Version
https://www.edition-assemblage.de/?s=minor+on+the+move
Publication Date
2021
Editor
Kylie Crane, Lucy Gasser, Sara Morais dos Santos Bruss, Anna von Rath
Publisher
Edition Assemblage
City
Münster, Germany
ISBN
9783960420989
First Page
116
Last Page
136
Department
Critical Black Studies
Recommended Citation
Williams, Jaye Austin, "The Always Already of Anti-Blackness -- Sara Morais dos Santos Bruss Interviews Jaye Austin Williams" (2021). Faculty Contributions to Books. 243.
https://digitalcommons.bucknell.edu/fac_books/243
COinS
Publisher Statement
Taking up the figure of the cosmopolitan, the book moves beyond Eurocentric legacies of the term to trace densely interwoven histories of coloniality and cultural exchange. By engaging a wide array of academic and activist practices, the volume enables a productive consideration of how artistic testimony interrogates the rewritings of history. The notion of the minor speaks to the condition of those historically marginalized, and has of late reverberated in assessments of whiteness as innocent, fragile, and thus entitled to its historical privileges. The minor here is resituated as a critique against the underlying historicity of anti-blackness inherent to such concepts. The book’s discussions of mobility address gatekeeping and/as archiving by thinking through collaborative and institutionalised practices that work to engender, or restrict, movement. With a particular focus on transgressive practices and multiple positionalities, this volume collects critiques of structural inequalities and possible itineraries for redress. It will be a must-read for anyone interested in structural injustices in Germany, Europe and the world, in political practice, and in decolonizing modes of knowledge production.
“The paradigms of postcolonialism and cosmopolitanism have emerged in recent times offering different responses to similar questions, the most pertinent, perhaps, being: How do we, with our manifest differences, live together in the world?” (Gurminder Bhambra)