Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Mu, 49 Marks of Abolition [Kõva köide]

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Teised raamatud teemal:
In March 2020, Sora Y. Han learned her father was dying of cancer just as the COVID-19 pandemic arrived on California's shores. These two events led Han to introspection: “Who have I been writing to?” and “Who have I been writing for?” In her observance of the 49 days of mourning in Buddhist tradition, answers come in the form of muno thing, nothingness. Han’s poetic meditations on freedom struggle come alive in the empty spaces between words, letters, and pictograms spanning her many languages—English, Korean, Chinese, jazz, law, and poetry. Transliterating and dystranslating the writings of Fred Moten, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Jacques Lacan, Frantz Fanon, and others through the Korean alphabet, Han weaves the DMZ, Betty’s Case, the Thirteenth Amendment, Afro-pessimism, and psychoanalytic desire together into the open field of Bay Area radicalism. Mu is both a loving homage to and a playful subversion of political inheritances and the unsayable beyond law.

Sora Y. Han offers a poetic and radical work of legal theory and criticism that works at the confluence of Korean and Black anticolonial thought and freedom struggles to articulate new visions of freedom.

Arvustused

Mu, 49 Marks of Abolition is a breathtaking work of impressive range. In a style that is remarkably poetic, Sora Y. Han moves from mourning her fathers death according to the Korean Buddhist conception of mu to Lacanian psychoanalysis, from contemporary experimental black and Asian American poetry to black critical theory, from US law-constitutional, carceral, and contract-to differential geometry and Korean history. I learned a great many things from this book. - R. A. Judy, author of (Sentient Flesh: Thinking in Disorder, Poiesis in Black) 49 breaths to accompany a father on his final journey to the Ancestors; 49 stops along the penitentiary pilgrimage that is the huis clos of language; 49 periodic beats to move us through the thicket of legal theory into a destabilized poetics of off; 49 stepping stones into the mourning ground where law and poetry confront each other in the violence of grammar-49 times over Mu gifts us the means to mourn the split Tongue of Adam that conscripts, constricts, and condemns. - M. NourbeSe Philip, author of (Zong!)

Note on Etymologies  ix
Preface  xi
Acknowledgments  xxi
savoir black  1
terra incognita  29
nonperformance  63
non liquet blackness  103
the sur-round  131
res nulla loquitur  167
mu  187
Notes  207
Bibliography  227
Index  241
Sora Y. Han is Professor of Criminology, Law and Society, Comparative Literature, and African American Studies at the University of California, Irvine. She is the author of Letters of the Law: Race and the Fantasy of Colorblindness in American Law.