From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philosophical and political ideology
The Black radical tradition
[1] is a philosophical tradition and political ideology with roots in 20th century
North America . It is a "collection of cultural, intellectual, action-oriented labor aimed at disrupting social, political, economic, and cultural norms originating in anti-colonial and antislavery efforts."
[2] It was first popularised by
Cedric Robinson 's book
Black Marxism .
[3]
Influential concepts from the Black radical tradition include
abolition ,
racial capitalism , and
intersectionality .
[4] The Black radical tradition is closely related to
anti-colonial ,
decolonial thought and Marxist
third worldism .
[5]
[6]
Prominent figures and movements associated with the Black radical tradition include
W. E. B. Du Bois ,
Malcolm X , the
Black Panther Party ,
Angela Davis , the
civil rights movement ,
Black feminism ,
Afrocentrism , and contemporary movements like
Black Lives Matter . A prominent Black Radical journal is
Race & Class .
[7]
Thinkers
See also
References
^
"What Is This Black in the Black Radical Tradition?" . Verso . Retrieved 2023-04-16 .
^
" "The Black Radical Tradition of Resistance" | U-M LSA National Center for Institutional Diversity" . lsa.umich.edu . Retrieved 2023-04-16 .
^ Winterhalter, Elizabeth (2021-11-11).
"Cedric Robinson and the Black Radical Tradition" . JSTOR Daily . Retrieved 2023-04-16 .
^ Edwards, Zophia (2020-01-01), Eidlin, Barry; A. McCarthy, Michael (eds.),
"Applying the Black Radical Tradition: Class, Race, and a New Foundation for Studies of Development" , Rethinking Class and Social Difference , Political Power and Social Theory, vol. 37, Emerald Publishing Limited, pp. 155–183,
doi :
10.1108/s0198-871920200000037008 ,
ISBN
978-1-83982-020-5 ,
S2CID
224890460 , retrieved 2023-04-19
^ Pulido, Laura; De Lara, Juan (March 2018).
"Reimagining 'justice' in environmental justice: Radical ecologies, decolonial thought, and the Black Radical Tradition" . Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space . 1 (1–2): 76–98.
doi :
10.1177/2514848618770363 .
ISSN
2514-8486 .
^ Knox, Robert; Kumar, Ashok (2023-08-03).
"Reexamining Race and Capitalism in the Marxist Tradition – Editorial Introduction" . Historical Materialism . 31 (2): 25–48.
doi :
10.1163/1569206x-bja10012 .
ISSN
1465-4466 .
^
"Race & Class" . Institute of Race Relations . Retrieved 2023-05-24 .
^
"Rethinking Racial Capitalism" . blackwells.co.uk . Retrieved 2023-04-19 .
^
Resistance and Decolonization .
^
"Angela Davis: An Interview on the Futures of Black Radicalism" . Verso . Retrieved 2023-04-19 .
^
"Notes on Blacceleration - Journal #87" . www.e-flux.com . Retrieved 2023-05-18 .
^ Burden-Stelly, Charisse (2018-09-02).
"W.E.B. Du Bois in the Tradition of Radical Blackness: Radicalism, Repression, and Mutual Comradeship, 1930–1960" . Socialism and Democracy . 32 (3): 181–206.
doi :
10.1080/08854300.2018.1575070 .
ISSN
0885-4300 .
S2CID
150870410 .
^
Africana Critical Theory: Reconstructing The Black Radical Tradition, From W. E. B. Du Bois and C. L. R. James to Frantz Fanon and Amilcar Cabral .
^
"Oct. 8: Ruth Wilson Gilmore to speak" . UDaily . Retrieved 2023-04-19 .
^
" "The People Who Keep on Going": A Futures of Black Radicalism Listenin" . Verso . Retrieved 2023-04-19 .
^
"Fear of Black Consciousness: Lewis Gordon Interview | Philosophy Break" . philosophybreak.com . Retrieved 2023-05-18 .
^
"230312 Exploring the Black Radical Tradition" . Bishopsgate Institute . 12 March 2023. Retrieved 2023-04-19 .
^ Sinitiere, Phillip Luke (2022).
"Comrades in the Struggle for Black Freedom" . Phylon . 59 (1): 107–127.
JSTOR
27150917 .
^ Berger, Dan. " 'From Dachau with Love': George Jackson, Black Radical Memory, and the Transnational Political Vision of Prison Abolition". In Chase, Robert T. (ed.).
Caging Borders and Carceral States: Incarcerations, Immigration Detentions, and Resistance . pp. 355–384. Retrieved 2023-04-19 – via academic.oup.com.
^ Robinson, Cedric J. (1983).
"C. L. R. James and the Black Radical Tradition" . Review (Fernand Braudel Center) . 6 (3): 321–391.
ISSN
0147-9032 .
JSTOR
40240940 .
^ Kelley, Robin (2021).
"Why Black Marxism, Why Now?" . Boston Review .
^ Richards, Sandra; Lemelle, Sidney J. (2005).
"Chapter One: Pedagogy, Politics, and Power: ANTINOMIES of the BLACK RADICAL TRADITION" . Counterpoints . 237 : 5–31.
JSTOR
42978673 .
^
"Black Radical Tradition Group" . 3 October 2021.
^ Mbembe, Achille. Critique of Black Reason .
^ Kelley, Robin D.G.; Esch, Betsy (September 1999).
"Black like Mao: Red China and black revolution" . Souls . 1 (4): 6–41.
doi :
10.1080/10999949909362183 .
ISSN
1099-9949 .
S2CID
143732016 .
^ Narayan, John (2019).
"British Black Power: The anti-imperialism of political blackness and the problem of nativist socialism" . The Sociological Review . 67 (5): 945–967.
doi :
10.1177/0038026119845550 .
S2CID
150411821 .
^
"Black Radical Tradition" . Aaron Benanav . Retrieved 2023-04-19 .
^
"Empire's Endgame" . Pluto Press . Retrieved 2023-04-19 .
^ Robinson, Cedric J.; Sojoyner, Damien; Willoughby-Herard, Tiffany (1983).
Black Marxism, Revised and Updated Third Edition: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition (3 ed.). University of North Carolina Press.
ISBN
978-1-4696-6372-2 .
JSTOR
10.5149/9781469663746_robinson .
^
"Decolonial Marxism" . Verso . Retrieved 2023-04-19 .
^ Virdee, Satnam (2000).
"A Marxist Critique of Black Radical Theories of Trade-union Racism" . Sociology . 34 (3): 545–565.
doi :
10.1177/S003803850000033X .
ISSN
0038-0385 .
JSTOR
42856201 .
S2CID
146747065 .
^ Taylor, Keeanga-Yamahtta (20 July 2020).
"Until Black Women Are Free, None of Us Will be Free" . The New Yorker .
^ Hirsch, Afua (2018-08-14).
"Back to Black: Retelling Black Radicalism for the 21st Century by Kehinde Andrews – review" . The Observer .
ISSN
0029-7712 . Retrieved 2023-05-20 .
^ West, Cornel (1988).
"Black Radicalism and the Marxist Tradition" . Monthly Review . 40 (4): 51.
doi :
10.14452/MR-040-04-1988-08_5 .
^
"SO4C2 Racial Capitalism" .
^ Thomas, Greg (2001).
"Sex/Sexuality & Sylvia Wynter's "Beyond...": Anti-Colonial Ideas in "Black Radical Tradition" " . Journal of West Indian Literature . 10 (1/2): 92–118.
JSTOR
23019781 .
^ Rabaka, Reiland (November 2002).
"Malcolm X and/as Critical Theory: Philosophy, Radical Politics, and the African American Search for Social Justice" . Journal of Black Studies . 33 (2): 145–165.
doi :
10.1177/002193402237222 .
ISSN
0021-9347 .
S2CID
145478798 .