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[ecrea] new book: Race and Hegemonic Struggle in the United States: Pop Culture, Politics, and Protest.
Fri Nov 14 13:24:39 GMT 2014
New Book:
Race and Hegemonic Struggle in the United States: Pop Culture, Politics,
and Protest.
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press (Rowman & Littlefield Group).
Edited by Michael G. Lacy (Queens College, CUNY) and Mary E. Triece
(University of Akron)
How do we interpret and explain the paradox of racial trauma and amnesia
in popular commercial productions and documentaries in this “postracial”
age? How do ordinary citizens resist dominant stereotypes and confront
mainstream politicians while transforming their material realities and
lives? How do historically marginalized people use their bodies,
intellect, and status or positions to challenge persistent racial and
social inequalities and injustices? How might translated and revived
critical theories of culture explain such rhetoric?
Race and Hegemonic Struggle in the United States is a collection of
essays drawing on concepts developed by Italian political critic Antonio
Gramsci (and translated and reworked by Stuart Hall during the 1980s and
1990s) to examine the deployment and imagining of race in popular
culture in the United States during the twentieth and twenty-first
centuries. The chapters in this volume call for renewed attention to
Gramscian political thought to examine, understand, and explain the
persistent contradictions, ambivalence, and paradoxes in representations
and material realities. The book’s contributors rely on Gramsci’s ideas
to explore how popular Hollywood films, documentaries, reality TV shows,
politics, and resistance (e.g., black power and liberation) discourses
reproduce or transform our understandings of race and racism, racial
formations, social inequalities, and power relationships. Together, the
chapters confront forms of collective trauma and cultural amnesia
suggested in the fantastic claims of a “postracial” reality, while
exposing the historical, institutional, social, and political forces and
constraints that make antiracism, atonement, and egalitarian change so
difficult to achieve.
Contents
Forward: Eric King Watts, “A Moment of Blackness – and Zombies”
1. Michael G. Lacy, “Racial Shadows, Threat, Neoliberalism, and
Trauma: Reading ‘The Book of Eli”
2. Casey Ryan Kelley, “Bizarre Foods: White Privilege and the
Neocolonial Palate”
3. Kristen Hoerl, “Remembering Black Dissent: Traumatic
Counter-memories in Contemporary Documentaries about the Black
Power Movement”
4. Mary E. Triece, “The Mother Tongue as ‘back talk’: Resisting
Racism in Congressional Hearings”
5. Brittany Lewis, “At the Margins of a Political Imagination:
Black Feminist Politics and the Racial Politics of the New Democrats”
6. Evan Beaumont Center, “The Birthers: Hegemony and Postracial
Positionality”
7. David W. Seitz, “Embodying Unauthorized Immigrants:
Counterhegemonic Protest and the Rhetorical Power of the ‘Material
Diatribe’”
8. Linda Diana Horwitz and Catherine H. Palczewski,
“Racing/Sexing the Rhetorical Situation: Angela Davis’ Embodied
Contextual Reconstruction”
9. Anna M. Young, “The Black Public Intellectual of the Joshua
Generation: Answering the Call”
Michael G. Lacy is assistant professor of Media Studies in the
Department of Media Studies at Queens College, City University of New York.
Mary E. Triece is professor in the School of Communication at the
University of Akron.
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