In this Book

summary
As the political climate of the United States moves rightward, effective and visionary voices from the left become both rarer and more essential. In Resisting State Violence, African American scholar-activist Joy James provides such a voice. Taking the convergence of race, gender, and class as fundamental trajectories, James offers a stimulating and iconoclastic account of a world in which the United States functions as the political-police center. At its core, Resisting State Violence is about the many ways the current structure of American government and society is inimical to human rights. James examines the prevalence of racist violence in U.S. policies, making provocative connections between seemingly disparate themes and events, and always, insistently, linking global and U.S. domestic politics. She creates a picture of a nation that consistently uses dehumanization to normalize and rationalize violence in foreign policy, all the while creating a domestic climate that pathologizes blackness and sexuality, portraying those most vulnerable to violence as its carriers. In the systematic and ubiquitous nature of state violence, however, James sees a possibility of hope in the building of coalitions across race, class, gender, and national divides. She argues that the very commonality that makes the system seem so overpowering can serve as the basis for resistance-that the elements that hold together a web of oppression and misuse of power also mark its vulnerabilities, especially when confronted with an equally systematic resistance. James offers concrete solutions for the dilemmas facing progressive politics and the individuals who work to achieve social justice. Resisting State Violence is a clear-sighted and uncompromising guidebook for those who want to understand the forces that hinder social change, and to effectively move beyond them.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page, Copyright
  2. pp. iii-iv
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
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  1. Foreword
  2. Angela Y. Davis
  3. p. vii
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  1. Preface: Reading... Resistance...
  2. pp. ix-x
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. p. xi
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  1. Part I. Rage and Resistance Lessons: Political Life and Theory
  1. Introduction
  2. pp. 3-23
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  1. 1. Erasing the Spectacle of Racialized State Violence
  2. pp. 24-43
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  1. 2. Radicalizing Language and Law: Genocide, Discrimination, and Human Rights
  2. pp. 44-60
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  1. Part II. Colonial Hangovers: U.S. Policies at Home and Abroad
  1. 3. Hunting Prey: The U.S. Invasion of Panama
  2. pp. 63-83
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  1. 4. The Color(s) of Eros: Cuba as American Obsession
  2. pp. 84-105
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  1. 5. Border-Crossing Alliances: Japanese and African American Women in the State's Household
  2. pp. 106-122
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  1. Part III. Cultural Politics: Black Women and Sexual Violence
  1. 6. Anita Hill, Clarence Thomas, and Gender Abstractions
  2. pp. 125-132
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  1. 7. Symbolic Rage: Prosecutorial Performances and Racialized Representations of Sexual Violence
  2. pp. 133-153
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  1. 8. Coalition Cross Fire: Antiviolence Organizing and Interracial Rape
  2. pp. 154-168
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  1. Part IV. Teaching, Community, and Political Activism
  1. 9. "Discredited Knowledge" in the Nonfiction of Toni Morrison
  2. pp. 171-188
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  1. 10. Teaching, Intersections, and the Integration of Multiculturalism
  2. pp. 189-203
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  1. 11. Gender, Race, and Radicalism: Reading the Autobiographies of Native and African American Women Activists
  2. pp. 204-226
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  1. Conclusion: United Nations Conventions, Antiracist Feminisms, and Coalition Politics
  2. pp. 227-244
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  1. Notes
  2. pp. 245-258
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 259-265
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