Antebellum Posthuman Antebellum Posthuman

Antebellum Posthuman

Race and Materiality in the Mid-Nineteenth Century

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    • £27.99

Publisher Description

From the eighteenth-century abolitionist motto 'Am I Not a Man and a Brother?' to the Civil Rights-era declaration 'I AM a Man,' antiracism has engaged in a struggle for the recognition of black humanity. It has done so, however, even as the very definition of the human has been called into question by the biological sciences. While this conflict between liberal humanism and biological materialism animates debates in posthumanism and critical race studies today, Antebellum Posthuman argues that it first emerged as a key question in the antebellum era. In a moment in which the authority of science was increasingly invoked to defend slavery and other racist policies, abolitionist arguments underwent a profound shift, producing a new, materialist strain of antislavery. Engaging the works of Douglass, Thoreau, and Whitman, and Dickinson, Cristin Ellis identifies and traces the emergence of an antislavery materialism in mid-nineteenth century American literature, placing race at the center of the history of posthumanist thought. Turning to contemporary debates now unfolding between posthumanist and critical race theorists, Ellis demonstrates how this antebellum posthumanism highlights the difficulty of reconciling materialist ontologies of the human with the project of social justice.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2018
1 February
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
379
Pages
PUBLISHER
Fordham University Press
SIZE
1.3
MB

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