In this Book

Sylvia Wynter: On Being Human as Praxis

Book
Katherine McKittrick, ed.
2015
Published by: Duke University Press
summary
The Jamaican writer and cultural theorist Sylvia Wynter is best known for her diverse writings that pull together insights from theories in history, literature, science, and black studies, to explore race, the legacy of colonialism, and representations of humanness. Sylvia Wynter: On Being Human as Praxis is a critical genealogy of Wynter’s work, highlighting her insights on how race, location, and time together inform what it means to be human. The contributors explore Wynter’s stunning reconceptualization of the human in relation to concepts of blackness, modernity, urban space, the Caribbean, science studies, migratory politics, and the interconnectedness of creative and theoretical resistances. The collection includes an extensive conversation between Sylvia Wynter and Katherine McKittrick that delineates Wynter’s engagement with writers such as Frantz Fanon, W. E. B. DuBois, and Aimé Césaire, among others; the interview also reveals the ever-extending range and power of Wynter’s intellectual project,  and elucidates her attempts to rehistoricize humanness as praxis.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Copyright, Dedication

pp. i-vi

Contents

pp. vii-viii

Acknowledgments

pp. ix-xiv

1. Yours in the Intellectual Struggle: Sylvia Wynter and the Realization of the Living

pp. 1-8

2. Unparalleled Catastrophe for Our Species? Or, to Give Humanness a Different Future: Conversations

pp. 9-89

3. Before Man: Sylvia Wynter's Rewriting of the Modern Episteme

pp. 90-105

4. Sylvia Wynter: What Does It Mean to Be Human?

pp. 106-123

5. Still Submerged: The Uninhabitability of Urban Redevelopment

pp. 124-141

6. Axis, Bold as Love: On Sylvia Wynter, Jimi Hendrix, and the Promise of Science

pp. 142-163

7. Strategic Anti-Essentialism: Decolonizing Decolonization

pp. 164-182

8. Genres of Human: Multiculturalism, Cosmo-politics, and the Caribbean Basin

pp. 183-202

9. From Masquerade to Maskarade: Caribbean Cultural Resistance and the Rehumanizing Project

pp. 203-225

10. "Come on Kid, Let's Go Get the Thing": The Sociogenic Principle and the Being of Being Black / Human

pp. 226-248

Bibliography

pp. 249-274

Contributors

pp. 275-276

Index

pp. 277-290
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