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Thinking the US South: Contemporary Philosophy from Southern Perspectives [Paperback / softback]

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  • Format: Paperback / softback, 232 pages, height x width x depth: 226x152x15 mm, weight: 300 g, 10 black & white images
  • Pub. Date: 30-Mar-2021
  • Publisher: Northwestern University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0810143305
  • ISBN-13: 9780810143302
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  • Format: Paperback / softback, 232 pages, height x width x depth: 226x152x15 mm, weight: 300 g, 10 black & white images
  • Pub. Date: 30-Mar-2021
  • Publisher: Northwestern University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0810143305
  • ISBN-13: 9780810143302
Other books in subject:

Knowledge emerges from contexts, which are shaped by people&;s experiences. The varied essays in Thinking the US South: Contemporary Philosophy from Southern Perspectives demonstrate that Southern identities, borders, and practices play an important but unacknowledged role in ethical, political, emotional, and global issues connected to knowledge production. Not merely one geographical region among others, the US South is sometimes a fantasy and other times a nightmare, but it is always a prominent component of the American national imaginary. In connection with the Global North and Global South, the US South provides a valuable perspective from which to explore race, class, gender, and other inter- and intra-American differences. The result is a fresh look at how identity is constituted; the role of place, ancestors, and belonging in identity formation; the impact of regional differences on what counts as political resistance; the ways that affect and emotional labor circulate; practices of boundary policing, deportation, and mourning; issues of disability and slowness; racial and other forms of suffering; and above all, the question of whether and how doing philosophy changes when done from Southern standpoints. Examining racist tropes, Indigenous land claims, Black Southern philosophical perspectives, migrant labor, and more, this incisive anthology makes clear that roots matter.



This anthology demonstrates that US Southern identities, borders, and practices play an important but unacknowledged role in ethical, political, emotional, and global issues connected to knowledge production.
 
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Doing Philosophy from Southern Standpoints 1(16)
Shannon Sullivan
Part I Southern Identities
1 The Southern White Worker Question
17(18)
Linda Martin Alcoff
2 Southern Land: Indigeneity, Genocide, and Racialization in Whitened Lineages
35(18)
Ladelle McWhorter
3 Between Socrates and Grandma: On Being a Black Southern Philosopher
53(20)
Arnold L. Farr
Part II Southern Borders
4 Are You a Yankee? Purity, Identity, and "the Southern"
73(18)
Michael J. Monahan
5 Affective Economies from the Global South to the US South: Global Care Chains and Southern Sympathy Fatigue
91(22)
Shiloh Whitney
6 Altars for the Living: Shadow Ground, Aesthetic Memory, and the US-Mexico Borderlands
113(22)
Mariana Ortega
Part III Southern Practices
7 "I Ain't Thinkin' `Bout You'": Black Liberation Politics at the Intersection of Region, Gender, and Class
135(18)
Lindsey Stewart
8 Black Ancestral Discourses: Cultural Cadences from the South
153(10)
Devonya N. Havis
9 Dumping on Southern "White Trash": Etiquette and Abjection
163(18)
Shannon Sullivan
10 On Being Slow: Philosophy and Disability in the US South
181(22)
Kim Q. Hall
Afterword: Philosophizings in/of/regarding "the South(s)": A New Field of Discourse in US American Philosophy? 203(8)
Lucius T. Outlaw (Jr.)
About the Authors 211