Gender and the abjection of blackness
In: SUNY series in gender theory
In: SUNY Series in Gender Theory Ser.
Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Against Gender: Enslavism and the Subjects of Feminism -- 2 Abolish Property: Black Feminist Struggles against Anti-Blackness -- Remembering -- Hesitation -- Rereading the Human: Repercussions of Sylvia Wynter's Epistemic Project -- Spillers: Gender and Black Flesh -- White Culpability, Enjoyment, and Gender in Hartman's Work -- 3 Gender and the Grammar of Enslavism -- The Anti-enslavist Challenge of Blackness -- Reading Enslavism: A Hermeneutics of Absence -- White Machinations -- Woman as Slave Mobilized -- Hegelian Fallacy and Its Lacanian Echoes -- The Promotion of Slavishness, or Nietzsche's Contempt -- Enslavism and Abjection -- White Abjectorship at Work -- Orphan Reading: A Methodology of Tracing Absent Absence -- 4 Abjective Returns: The Slave's Fungibility in White Gender Studies -- De Beauvoir's Discontents, Feminism, and Enslavement -- Slavery and Ambiguous Interventions -- Rhetorical Slavery and the Distinction of Gender -- Jessica Benjamin: Gender and Bondage -- The Subject, Desire, and the Question of Violence -- Mothering -- The Suffering Subject -- Repeating Abjection: Judith Butler Yet Again -- Reading Abjectivation -- Antigone and Fungibility -- Subjectivation -- The Human Frame -- 5 Post Gender, Post Human: Braidotti's Nietzschean Echoes of Anti-Blackness -- Bondage and Vulnerability -- A Leap through Pain: Slave Moralities, Recycled -- 6 On Dispossession as a False Analogy -- Bibliography -- Index