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Posts 2-13

Bernard E. Harcourt | Epilogue on Abolition Democracy 2/13

October 31, 2020Bernard Harcourt

By Bernard E. Harcourt Our task at Abolition Democracy 2/13 was to critically engage the theoretical framework of “abolition democracy”—the framework coined by W.E.B. Du Bois in his magnum opus, Black Reconstruction in America, and reimagined by Angela Davis in… Continue Reading →

Posts 2-13

Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak | W.E.B. Du Bois and Angela Davis on Abolition Democracy

October 16, 2020Bernard Harcourt

By Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak I am very grateful to Bernard for inviting me to join this wonderful group. Let me first compare Angela Davis’s notion of abolition democracy to Du Bois’s analysis of the same phenomenon. Davis is of course… Continue Reading →

Posts 2-13

Robert Gooding-Williams | Democratic Despotism and The New Imperialism

October 12, 2020Bernard Harcourt

By Robert Gooding-Williams Note to Reader: I have excerpted the following remarks from a manuscript-in-progress on Du Bois’s Political Aesthetics.  They focus on Du Bois’s conception of democratic despotism. They bear on our forthcoming 13/13 discussion, because Du Bois understands democratic despotism… Continue Reading →

Posts 2-13

Bernard E. Harcourt | Abolition Democracy as a Philosophy of History

October 11, 2020Bernard Harcourt

By Bernard E. Harcourt “What we manage to do each time we win a victory is not so much to secure change once and for all, but rather to create new terrains for struggle.” — Angela Davis, Abolition Democracy (2005).… Continue Reading →

Posts 2-13

Bernard E. Harcourt | Introduction to Abolition Democracy 2/13

October 11, 2020Bernard Harcourt

By Bernard E. Harcourt “Abolition-democracy demands for Negroes physical freedom, civil rights, economic opportunity and education and the right to vote, as a matter of sheer human justice and right.” — Du Bois, Black Reconstruction in America (1935) W.E.B. Du Bois… Continue Reading →

Posts 2-13
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