One could not pick a better guide through the intellectual and political history of <i>ressentiment </i>than Zahi Zalloua. His account of the radical contemporary potential of <i>ressentiment</i> - the political affect par excellence, <i>the</i> primary affect of the wretched, as he reminds us - is incisive, nuanced, politically astute, intellectually dexterous, and nothing short of indispensable in our current period of crisis. Reading <i>The Politics of the Wretched</i> forces us to leave behind our many presumptions of the uses and values of the affective and political force of <i>ressentiment</i> and recognize its capacity for ontological upheaval and mutation.
Derek Hook, Associate Professor, Duquesne University, USA
This compelling and engaging political and philosophical treatise is a needed critique of identity politics, including Afro-Pessimism, based on forms of Nietzschean <i>ressentiment</i>. Reclaiming ressentiment as a positive negation of oppression, Zalloua builds on what Frantz Fanon considered the rationality of revolt of the wretched of earth, claiming solidarity with every social action for human dignity and freedom.
Nigel Gibson, Professor of Africana Studies, Emerson College, USA
This book offers the most compelling embrace of the disruptive force of <i>ressentiment </i>to date. Drawing on inspirations from psychoanalysis to the black radical tradition, Zalloua removes the concept of slave morality from the Nietzschean orbit of fetishized victimhood and its destiny in postmodern identity politics once and for all.
Sjoerd van Tuinen, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands