R&L Logo R&L Logo
  • GENERAL
    • Browse by Subjects
    • New Releases
    • Coming Soon
    • Chases's Calendar
  • ACADEMIC
    • Textbooks
    • Browse by Course
    • Instructor's Copies
    • Monographs & Research
    • Reference
  • PROFESSIONAL
    • Education
    • Intelligence & Security
    • Library Services
    • Business & Leadership
    • Museum Studies
    • Music
    • Pastoral Resources
    • Psychotherapy
  • FREUD SET
Cover Image
Hardback
Paperback
eBook
share of facebook share on twitter
Add to GoodReads

Black Existential Freedom

Nathalie Etoke

The history of slavery, colonization, subjugation, gratuitous violence, and the denial of basic human rights to people of African descent has led Afro-Pessimists to look at black existence through the lens of white supremacy and anti-blackness. Against this trend, Black Existential Freedom argues that Blackness is not inherently synonymous with victimhood. Rather, it is inextricable from existential freedom and the struggle for political liberation.

This book presents an existential analysis of continental and diasporic African experiences through critical interpretations of music, film, and fiction that portray what it means to be human— to persevere in the tension between life and physical, psychological, and social death—for the sake of freedom. With its transdisciplinary perspective and convergence of Africana existential philosophy, African-American Studies, Afro-French Studies, Diaspora Studies, and African studies, this book is not concerned with disciplinary boundaries or certain appropriations of European metaphysics that are committed to a reading of black “non-being.”
Black Existential Freedom explores the continuities and discontinuities of black existence and the manifestations and the meanings of blackness within different countries, time periods, and social and political contexts.

Etoke's book empowers the reader to understand and process the complexities of racialized identity in a globalized contemporary society. Ultimately, it is an ode to human survival and freedom.

  • Details
  • Details
  • Author
  • Author
  • TOC
  • TOC
  • Reviews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Features
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 170 • Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-5381-5706-0 • Hardback • November 2022 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-5381-7306-0 • Paperback • November 2022 • $37.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-5381-5708-4 • eBook • November 2022 • $35.00 • (£30.00)
Series: Living Existentialism
Subjects: Philosophy / Movements / Existentialism, Philosophy / Philosophy of Race, Political Science / Colonialism & Post-Colonialism, Philosophy / Political

Nathalie Etoke is associate professor of French and Africana studies at the Graduate Center, CUNY. Her book Melancholia Africana received the Frantz Fanon Book Award from the Caribbean Philosophical Association. In 2011, she made a documentary entitled Afro Diasporic French Identities thatexamines how the legacy of slavery and colonization challenges the republican ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity.

Introduction

I: Diasporic Blues

  • Chapter 1: Black in Blue: Subjectivity, catastrophe, and memory in Guy Deslauriers’ The Middle Passage
  • Chapter 2: Sing to Be Free
  • Chapter 3: Haiti 2010, Life Arises from the Rubble

II: Come on Children of the Homeland, the Day of Glory has Arrived

  • Chapter 4:Black in Blue, Red, and White
  • Chapter 5: “COMMUNITY” and “COLOR” : Black in Blue White and Red
  • Chapter 6: I Remember Therefore I suffer/I Remember Therefore I am

III: I called from the depth
  • Chapter 7: Human/Non-Human: The Negative Utopia of Sub-Saharan African Migration
  • Chapter 8: The other Nègre: Treatment of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender People in Uganda and South Africa

Conclusion

It is tempting to regard the 2020 murder of George Floyd by law enforcement as a contemporary variant of the meaning of Blackness in society, a meaning traceable to slavery, colonialism, and then postcolonialism. In such a case, Blackness translates into a cynical and pessimistic outlook on life for Black people everywhere. Further, some see this pessimism manifested in so-called Black-on-Black violence. It is this very cynical outlook that Etoke challenges here. By analyzing Black people's creative productions—e.g., spirituals during slavery, the freedom songs of the 1960s, contemporary hip-hop and rap music, and Black theatrical performances—Etoke argues, contra the Afro-Pessimists, that Black people have constantly been affirming their humanity and subjectivity, hence optimism, even in the face of white supremacist domination and oppression. Etoke calls attention to oppressive structures specifically in France and the US but generally in the Global North, where the notion of Black citizenship seems like an oxymoron. Even so, Black people have not just been “singing the Blues” and waiting for death, but instead have been articulating forms of resistance and engaging in self-affirmation that bespeaks optimism and existential freedom. Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty.


— Choice Reviews


Afro-pessimists have dared Black scholars to look into the abyss and suspend their belief in the illusion of humanity. Nathalie Etoke has accepted that challenge and found at the bottom of nothingness the power of struggle to create existential resources that shatter the shackles thought to ontologically bind Blackness to the condition of the slave. Black Existential Freedom takes the refusal of Blacks to BE what the white world demands to be a mode of theorization. Etoke’s text is an insightful analysis of racism in France, the United States, and Africa that cannot be ignored in these darkening times.


— Tommy Curry, The University of Edinburgh, author of The Man-Not


Nathalie Etoke has written a beautiful and moving book that shows how the living practice of existential freedom has never been more important in resisting a politics of discouragement that gives into our seemingly desperate times. She not only answers Afro-pessimism, but also moves widely to bring back Black existentialism to the burning issues of the times—notably the attacks on LGBTQ people of color. She reminds us on every page that Black existential freedom was not and cannot be buried under the horrors of enslavement and colonization. The struggle for freedom is celebrated as what makes us human.


— Drucilla Cornell, Professor of Political Science, Comparative Literature, and Women and Gender Studies, Rutgers University


With the characteristic lyricism that readers of Nathalie Etoke would expect, Black Existential Freedom weaves a throbbing counternarrative of continental and diasporic African unremitting insistence on life. Speaking on music, film, and fiction about an existence that includes disaster and hell as undeniable components, Etoke joins the rich history of struggle that generated Black Studies, refusing to see Africana existence through pessimistic, conservative, and distorting lenses that are all too in vogue. Warning that homophobia strengthens bonds between repressive post-colonial states and their disempowered citizens, she offers us a precious, multifaceted archive focused unflinchingly on freedom.


— Jane Anna Gordon, author of Creolizing Political Theory and Statelessness and Contemporary Enslavement


Against the death fetishism, Eurocentrism, and de facto political conservatism of Afro-pessimism, Nathalie Etoke offers, through meticulous scholarship and poetic insight, the existential dimensions—from the global perspective of Black political struggles to the practices of joy and pleasure in everyday life across the African diaspora—of Blackness as an affirmation of life. She exposes “the banality of white supremacy,” which attacks human agency, dignity, and freedom and argues that the humanity of Black people extends beyond moral and political forms of resistance. It is, as Etoke beautifully demonstrates, in the lived reality of Black people’s affirmation of life in contingency, in making meaning beyond the quagmire of despair. Black Existential Freedom reminds us that no better world can emerge without active, fought-for freedom. She counsels us to be inspired and learn from those whorose to the occasion of that responsibility and to draw upon the resources of our creativity at every aspect of existence, which, we should remember, also means life.Yes, this book is at birth a classic work in Black existential thought. Read it. Learn from it. And share it, as I plan to, far and wide.”


— Lewis R. Gordon, professor of philosophy and Africana studies, University of Connecticut


Boston Review: Nathalie Etoke talked about her book in this author interview.

Link:https://www.bostonreview.net/articles/what-does-it-mean-to-be-free/



Black Existential Freedom

Cover Image
Hardback
Paperback
eBook
Summary
Summary
  • The history of slavery, colonization, subjugation, gratuitous violence, and the denial of basic human rights to people of African descent has led Afro-Pessimists to look at black existence through the lens of white supremacy and anti-blackness. Against this trend, Black Existential Freedom argues that Blackness is not inherently synonymous with victimhood. Rather, it is inextricable from existential freedom and the struggle for political liberation.

    This book presents an existential analysis of continental and diasporic African experiences through critical interpretations of music, film, and fiction that portray what it means to be human— to persevere in the tension between life and physical, psychological, and social death—for the sake of freedom. With its transdisciplinary perspective and convergence of Africana existential philosophy, African-American Studies, Afro-French Studies, Diaspora Studies, and African studies, this book is not concerned with disciplinary boundaries or certain appropriations of European metaphysics that are committed to a reading of black “non-being.”
    Black Existential Freedom explores the continuities and discontinuities of black existence and the manifestations and the meanings of blackness within different countries, time periods, and social and political contexts.

    Etoke's book empowers the reader to understand and process the complexities of racialized identity in a globalized contemporary society. Ultimately, it is an ode to human survival and freedom.

Details
Details
  • Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
    Pages: 170 • Trim: 6¼ x 9½
    978-1-5381-5706-0 • Hardback • November 2022 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
    978-1-5381-7306-0 • Paperback • November 2022 • $37.00 • (£30.00)
    978-1-5381-5708-4 • eBook • November 2022 • $35.00 • (£30.00)
    Series: Living Existentialism
    Subjects: Philosophy / Movements / Existentialism, Philosophy / Philosophy of Race, Political Science / Colonialism & Post-Colonialism, Philosophy / Political
Author
Author
  • Nathalie Etoke is associate professor of French and Africana studies at the Graduate Center, CUNY. Her book Melancholia Africana received the Frantz Fanon Book Award from the Caribbean Philosophical Association. In 2011, she made a documentary entitled Afro Diasporic French Identities thatexamines how the legacy of slavery and colonization challenges the republican ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Introduction

    I: Diasporic Blues

    • Chapter 1: Black in Blue: Subjectivity, catastrophe, and memory in Guy Deslauriers’ The Middle Passage
    • Chapter 2: Sing to Be Free
    • Chapter 3: Haiti 2010, Life Arises from the Rubble

    II: Come on Children of the Homeland, the Day of Glory has Arrived

    • Chapter 4:Black in Blue, Red, and White
    • Chapter 5: “COMMUNITY” and “COLOR” : Black in Blue White and Red
    • Chapter 6: I Remember Therefore I suffer/I Remember Therefore I am

    III: I called from the depth
    • Chapter 7: Human/Non-Human: The Negative Utopia of Sub-Saharan African Migration
    • Chapter 8: The other Nègre: Treatment of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender People in Uganda and South Africa

    Conclusion
Reviews
Reviews
  • It is tempting to regard the 2020 murder of George Floyd by law enforcement as a contemporary variant of the meaning of Blackness in society, a meaning traceable to slavery, colonialism, and then postcolonialism. In such a case, Blackness translates into a cynical and pessimistic outlook on life for Black people everywhere. Further, some see this pessimism manifested in so-called Black-on-Black violence. It is this very cynical outlook that Etoke challenges here. By analyzing Black people's creative productions—e.g., spirituals during slavery, the freedom songs of the 1960s, contemporary hip-hop and rap music, and Black theatrical performances—Etoke argues, contra the Afro-Pessimists, that Black people have constantly been affirming their humanity and subjectivity, hence optimism, even in the face of white supremacist domination and oppression. Etoke calls attention to oppressive structures specifically in France and the US but generally in the Global North, where the notion of Black citizenship seems like an oxymoron. Even so, Black people have not just been “singing the Blues” and waiting for death, but instead have been articulating forms of resistance and engaging in self-affirmation that bespeaks optimism and existential freedom. Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty.


    — Choice Reviews


    Afro-pessimists have dared Black scholars to look into the abyss and suspend their belief in the illusion of humanity. Nathalie Etoke has accepted that challenge and found at the bottom of nothingness the power of struggle to create existential resources that shatter the shackles thought to ontologically bind Blackness to the condition of the slave. Black Existential Freedom takes the refusal of Blacks to BE what the white world demands to be a mode of theorization. Etoke’s text is an insightful analysis of racism in France, the United States, and Africa that cannot be ignored in these darkening times.


    — Tommy Curry, The University of Edinburgh, author of The Man-Not


    Nathalie Etoke has written a beautiful and moving book that shows how the living practice of existential freedom has never been more important in resisting a politics of discouragement that gives into our seemingly desperate times. She not only answers Afro-pessimism, but also moves widely to bring back Black existentialism to the burning issues of the times—notably the attacks on LGBTQ people of color. She reminds us on every page that Black existential freedom was not and cannot be buried under the horrors of enslavement and colonization. The struggle for freedom is celebrated as what makes us human.


    — Drucilla Cornell, Professor of Political Science, Comparative Literature, and Women and Gender Studies, Rutgers University


    With the characteristic lyricism that readers of Nathalie Etoke would expect, Black Existential Freedom weaves a throbbing counternarrative of continental and diasporic African unremitting insistence on life. Speaking on music, film, and fiction about an existence that includes disaster and hell as undeniable components, Etoke joins the rich history of struggle that generated Black Studies, refusing to see Africana existence through pessimistic, conservative, and distorting lenses that are all too in vogue. Warning that homophobia strengthens bonds between repressive post-colonial states and their disempowered citizens, she offers us a precious, multifaceted archive focused unflinchingly on freedom.


    — Jane Anna Gordon, author of Creolizing Political Theory and Statelessness and Contemporary Enslavement


    Against the death fetishism, Eurocentrism, and de facto political conservatism of Afro-pessimism, Nathalie Etoke offers, through meticulous scholarship and poetic insight, the existential dimensions—from the global perspective of Black political struggles to the practices of joy and pleasure in everyday life across the African diaspora—of Blackness as an affirmation of life. She exposes “the banality of white supremacy,” which attacks human agency, dignity, and freedom and argues that the humanity of Black people extends beyond moral and political forms of resistance. It is, as Etoke beautifully demonstrates, in the lived reality of Black people’s affirmation of life in contingency, in making meaning beyond the quagmire of despair. Black Existential Freedom reminds us that no better world can emerge without active, fought-for freedom. She counsels us to be inspired and learn from those whorose to the occasion of that responsibility and to draw upon the resources of our creativity at every aspect of existence, which, we should remember, also means life.Yes, this book is at birth a classic work in Black existential thought. Read it. Learn from it. And share it, as I plan to, far and wide.”


    — Lewis R. Gordon, professor of philosophy and Africana studies, University of Connecticut


Features
Features
  • Boston Review: Nathalie Etoke talked about her book in this author interview.

    Link:https://www.bostonreview.net/articles/what-does-it-mean-to-be-free/



ALSO AVAILABLE

  • Cover image for the book Black Existentialism: Essays on the Transformative Thought of Lewis R. Gordon
  • Cover image for the book Being Subjects: Preliminary Materials of the Person
  • Cover image for the book Black Nihilism and Antiblack Racism
  • Cover image for the book The Reality of Others: Is Hell Other People?
  • Cover image for the book Karl Jaspers' Theory of Irrationality: From Delusions to Worldviews
  • Cover image for the book Decolonizing Existentialism and Phenomenology: The Liberation of Philosophies of Freedom and Identity
  • Cover image for the book Creolizing Sartre
  • Cover image for the book Earthly Engagements: Reading Sartre after the Holocene
  • Cover image for the book The Worlds of Existentialism: A Critical Reader
  • Cover image for the book Mabogo P. More: Philosophical Anthropology in Azania
  • Cover image for the book How Non-being Haunts Being: On Possibilities, Morality, and Death Acceptance
  • Cover image for the book Reading Sartre's Second Ethics: Morality, History, and Integral Humanity
  • Cover image for the book Philosophy of Antifascism: Punching Nazis and Fighting White Supremacy
  • Cover image for the book Entropic Affirmation: On the Origins of Conflict in Change, Death, and Otherness
  • Cover image for the book Sartre on Contingency: Antiblack Racism and Embodiment
  • Cover image for the book The Existentialists: Critical Essays on Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Sartre
  • Cover image for the book The Environmental Gaze: Reading Sartre through Guido van Helten's No Exit Murals
  • Cover image for the book Heidegger: An Introduction
  • Cover image for the book Phenomenology and Existentialism, 2nd edition
  • Cover image for the book The Remarkable Existentialists
  • Cover image for the book Ecology and Existence: Bringing Sartre to the Water's Edge
  • Cover image for the book The A to Z of Existentialism
  • Cover image for the book Philosophy and Truth
  • Cover image for the book Philosophy and Kafka
  • Cover image for the book The Sociology of Radical Commitment: Kurt H. Wolff's Existential Turn
  • Cover image for the book Gabriel Marcel and American Philosophy: The Religious Dimension of Experience
  • Cover image for the book Simone de Beauvoir's Philosophy of Lived Experience: Literature and Metaphysics
  • Cover image for the book Finite Transcendence: Existential Exile and the Myth of Home
  • Cover image for the book The A to Z of Husserl's Philosophy
  • Cover image for the book The Arrow that Flies by Day: Existential Images of the Human Condition from Socrates to Hannah Arendt
  • Cover image for the book Black Existentialism: Essays on the Transformative Thought of Lewis R. Gordon
  • Cover image for the book Being Subjects: Preliminary Materials of the Person
  • Cover image for the book Black Nihilism and Antiblack Racism
  • Cover image for the book The Reality of Others: Is Hell Other People?
  • Cover image for the book Karl Jaspers' Theory of Irrationality: From Delusions to Worldviews
  • Cover image for the book Decolonizing Existentialism and Phenomenology: The Liberation of Philosophies of Freedom and Identity
  • Cover image for the book Creolizing Sartre
  • Cover image for the book Earthly Engagements: Reading Sartre after the Holocene
  • Cover image for the book The Worlds of Existentialism: A Critical Reader
  • Cover image for the book Mabogo P. More: Philosophical Anthropology in Azania
  • Cover image for the book How Non-being Haunts Being: On Possibilities, Morality, and Death Acceptance
  • Cover image for the book Reading Sartre's Second Ethics: Morality, History, and Integral Humanity
  • Cover image for the book Philosophy of Antifascism: Punching Nazis and Fighting White Supremacy
  • Cover image for the book Entropic Affirmation: On the Origins of Conflict in Change, Death, and Otherness
  • Cover image for the book Sartre on Contingency: Antiblack Racism and Embodiment
  • Cover image for the book The Existentialists: Critical Essays on Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Sartre
  • Cover image for the book The Environmental Gaze: Reading Sartre through Guido van Helten's No Exit Murals
  • Cover image for the book Heidegger: An Introduction
  • Cover image for the book Phenomenology and Existentialism, 2nd edition
  • Cover image for the book The Remarkable Existentialists
  • Cover image for the book Ecology and Existence: Bringing Sartre to the Water's Edge
  • Cover image for the book The A to Z of Existentialism
  • Cover image for the book Philosophy and Truth
  • Cover image for the book Philosophy and Kafka
  • Cover image for the book The Sociology of Radical Commitment: Kurt H. Wolff's Existential Turn
  • Cover image for the book Gabriel Marcel and American Philosophy: The Religious Dimension of Experience
  • Cover image for the book Simone de Beauvoir's Philosophy of Lived Experience: Literature and Metaphysics
  • Cover image for the book Finite Transcendence: Existential Exile and the Myth of Home
  • Cover image for the book The A to Z of Husserl's Philosophy
  • Cover image for the book The Arrow that Flies by Day: Existential Images of the Human Condition from Socrates to Hannah Arendt
facebook icon twitter icon instagram icon linked in icon NEWSLETTERS
ABOUT US
  • Mission Statement
  • Employment
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility Statement
CONTACT
  • Company Directory
  • Publicity and Media Queries
  • Rights and Permissions
  • Textbook Resource Center
AUTHOR RESOURCES
  • Royalty Contact
  • Production Guidelines
  • Manuscript Submissions
ORDERING INFORMATION
  • Rowman & Littlefield
  • National Book Network
  • Ingram Publisher Services UK
  • Special Sales
  • International Sales
  • eBook Partners
  • Digital Catalogs
IMPRINTS
  • Rowman & Littlefield
  • Lexington Books
  • Hamilton Books
  • Applause Books
  • Amadeus Press
  • Backbeat Books
  • Bernan
  • Hal Leonard Books
  • Limelight Editions
  • Co-Publishing Partners
  • Globe Pequot
  • Down East Books
  • Falcon Guides
  • Gooseberry Patch
  • Lyons Press
  • Muddy Boots
  • Pineapple Press
  • TwoDot Books
  • Stackpole Books
PARTNERS
  • American Alliance of Museums
  • American Association for State and Local History
  • Brookings Institution Press
  • Center for Strategic & International Studies
  • Council on Foreign Relations
  • Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
  • Fortress Press
  • The Foundation for Critical Thinking
  • Lehigh University Press
  • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
  • Other Partners...