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The Other Side of Terror

Black Women and the Culture of US Empire

Erica R. Edwards

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Belletristik / Essays, Feuilleton, Literaturkritik, Interviews

Beschreibung

WINNER, 2022 John Hope Franklin Prize, given by the American Studies Association

HONORABLE MENTION, 2022 Gloria E. Anzaldúa Book Prize, given by the National Women's Studies Association

Reveals the troubling intimacy between Black women and the making of US global power

The year 1968 marked both the height of the worldwide Black liberation struggle and a turning point for the global reach of American power, which was built on the counterinsurgency honed on Black and other oppressed populations at home. The next five decades saw the consolidation of the culture of the American empire through what Erica R. Edwards calls the “imperial grammars of blackness.”

This is a story of state power at its most devious and most absurd, and, at the same time, a literary history of Black feminist radicalism at its most trenchant. Edwards reveals how the long war on terror, beginning with the late–Cold War campaign against organizations like the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense and the Black Liberation Army, has relied on the labor and the fantasies of Black women to justify the imperial spread of capitalism. Black feminist writers not only understood that this would demand a shift in racial gendered power, but crafted ways of surviving it.

The Other Side of Terror offers an interdisciplinary Black feminist analysis of militarism, security, policing, diversity, representation, intersectionality, and resistance, while discussing a wide array of literary and cultural texts, from the unpublished work of Black radical feminist June Jordan to the memoirs of Condoleezza Rice to the television series Scandal. With clear, moving prose, Edwards chronicles Black feminist organizing and writing on “the other side of terror”, which tracked changes in racial power, transformed African American literature and Black studies, and predicted the crises of our current era with unsettling accuracy.

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Counterinsurgency, Imperial grammars of blackness, Black veterans, Multiculturalism, Spike Lee, Intelligence, Gloria Naylor, Civil rights movement, Authoritarianism, Black military enlistment, Publishing, Shoshana Johnson, Paranoia, Black feminism, Segregation, Police violence, University, War on terror, Condoleezza Rice, Emergency preparedness, Alice Randall, Consumerism, Sexuality, Racism, Black femininity, Incorporation, Poetry, Respectability, Security, Black radicalism, Terrorism, Nicaraguan Revolution, Sex, Long war on terror, Black women writers, Toni Cade Bambara, Black studies, Grammar, June Jordan, Neoliberalism, Radicalism, Iraq War, 1991, Visual culture, Black English, Gender, Imperialism, Iraq War, 2003-2011, Terror, September 11 attacks, World War II, Surveillance, Drama, Assimilation, Linguistics, Cold War, Crisis management, Diversity, Danielle Evans