<p>The title of Yancy’s new collection of interviews tells it all: he gives voice to the top critical thinkers in today’s struggle against racism and sexism, thinkers who persist in their struggle to the end, until their lungs give out. Without obfuscating their differences, the book makes it palpable how this very diversity of approaches strengthens the common struggle. I’ve never seen a volume which combines multiple perspectives with a united strong commitment to emancipation. Until Our Lungs Give Out gives hope, and hope is what we need in our dark times.</p>

- Slavoj Žižek, author of Surplus-Enjoyment: A Guide for the Non-Perplexed and Heaven in Disorder,

<p>These stimulating and wide-ranging engagements—from Noam Chomsky and Judith Butler, to Robin Kelley, Mari Matsuda, and Cornel West—remind us of the range and depth of philosophical knowledge that underscores George Yancy’s work as a public intellectual as well as a scholar. This collection of conversations is a must-read for those of us seeking deeper understandings of the complex interactions of race, class, gender, and justice. </p>

- Henry Louis Gates Jr, the Alphonse Fletcher Unviersity Professor, Harvard University,

<p>Many thanks to philosopher and public intellectual George Yancy for this bounty of engaged thought from our foremost thinkers. We need this gift now more than ever—as a source of both perception and hope. </p>

- Nell Irvin Painter, author of <i>The History of White People</i>,

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<p>Until Our Lungs Give Out is a timely and tremendously important book. It presents thoughtful and thought-provoking conversations between distinguished philosopher George Yancy and a dazzling array of the world’s most profound, original, and generative thinkers about anti-Black racism in the U.S. and around the world.</p>

- George Lipsitz, author of <i>The Possessive Investment in Whiteness</i>,

<p>Refusing to adjust to injustice, George Yancy’s interlocutors speak with passion and urgency attesting to Yancy’s skill as an interviewer. Listen to what they have to say, for the insights they express speak to some of the gravest issues of our times.</p>

- Robert Gooding-Williams, professor of philosophy and African American studies, Columbia University,

Award-winning author, scholar, and social visionary George Yancy brings together the greatest minds of our time to speak truth to power and welcome everyone into a conversation about the pursuit of justice, equality, and peace.This interwoven collection of searingly honest interviews with leading intellectuals includes conversations with Noam Chomsky, Judith Butler, Cornel West, Robin D. G. Kelley, and Peter McLaren. Each conversation bears witness to the weighty moment in which it was first conducted and presented by Truthout and Tikkun magazines while pointing to ramifications, future hurdles, and practical optimism for moving forward. Learning how to speak about such topics as white supremacy and global whiteness, xenophobia, anti-BIPOC racism, fear of critical race theory, and the importance of Black feminist and trans perspectives, readers will be better able to join future conversations with their peers, those in power, and those who need to be empowered to change the status quo.
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Award-winning author, scholar, and social visionary George Yancy brings together the greatest minds of our time to speak truth to power and welcome everyone into a conversation about the pursuit of justice, equality, and peace.
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AcknowledgmentsForeword Tim WiseIntroduction: Critical Voices that Refuse to be SilencedGeorge YancyPart 1: Whiteness as Innocence Must DieIt’s Time for “Whiteness as Usual” to End: How do we Overcome the Death Wish of White Supremacy?Interview with David R. RoedigerTo be Black in the US is to Have a Knee Against Your Neck Each DayInterview with George Yancy by Woojin LimConfronting Prejudice isn’t Enough: We Must Eradicate the White Racial FrameInterview with Joe FeaginWe Have to Let White Supremacy Die in Order to Truly LiveInterview with David Kyuman KimPart 2: Global Anti-BlacknessAfropessimism Forces Us to Rethink Our Most Basic Assumptions About SocietyInterview with Frank B. Wilderson, III“I Can’t Breathe” Is a Cry Well Known to Black Indigenous People in AustraliaInterview with Chelsea WategoBlack Feminist “Back Talk” Anchors Resistance on Both Sides of the AtlanticInterview with Akwugo EmejuluAnti-Black Racism is Global: So Must be the Movement to End ItInterview with Adele NorrisPart 3: Racism, Education, and Practices of FreedomTrump is Attacking Critical Race Theory Because it is a Force for LiberationInterview with Mari MatsudaEducation Will be Critical in the Fight for Democracy and Anti-RacismInterview with Pedro A. NogueraPaulo Freire: Critical Education in a World in Need of RepairInterview with Peter McLarenPart 4: Challenging White Foundations The Tulsa Race Massacre Went Way Beyond “Black Wall Street”Interview with Robin D.G. KelleyThe Whiteness of Harvard and Wall Street is “Jim Crow, New Style”Interview with Cornel WestUS Founders Demonized Indigenous People While Coopting their Political PracticesInterview with Brian BurkhartFounded on Inequality, Can the US Ever be Truly Democratic and Inclusive?Interview with Tracy Denean Sharpley-WhitingPart 5: Assaults on the Black BodyWhite Indifference is Normalizing Spectacular Acts of ViolenceInterview with Robin D.G. KelleyWhite Journalists are Still Using the N-Word: This is an Intolerable Assault on Black FreedomInterview with Elizabeth PryorProtests Unleashed by Murder of George Floyd Exceed All in US HistoryInterview with Noam ChomskyPart 6: Matters of Faith and ReligionBlack Womanist Theology Offers Hope in the Face of White SupremacyInterview with Kelly Brown DouglasChristianity is Empty if it Doesn’t Address the Racist Carceral StateInterview with Mark L. TaylorWhite Supremacist Christianity Drives Trump’s Loyal Mob: We Must Scream it DownInterview with Susannah HeschelPart 7: The Politics of CatastropheMourning is a Political Act Amid the Pandemic and its DisparitiesInterview with Judith ButlerTrump’s Lying about COVID Amounts to TreasonInterview with Eduardo MendietaBig Pharma Cares More About Profiting from COVID than Human SurvivalInterview with Noam ChomskyPart 8: Realizing (or Imagining) the PossibleBlack Trans Feminist Thought Can Set Us FreeInterview with Che GossettReaching Beyond “Black Faces in High Places”Interview with Joy JamesPart 9: White Mob MentalityThe Capitol Siege was White Supremacy in Action: Trial Evidence Confirms ThatInterview with Peniel E. JosephCapitol Mob Reveals Ongoing Refusal to Accept Black Votes as LegitimateInterview with Eric FonnerTrump has Adopted a “Viva Death!” Approach to the PresidencyInterview with Noam ChomskyAbout the ContributorsIndex
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The title of Yancy’s new collection of interviews tells it all: he gives voice to the top critical thinkers in today’s struggle against racism and sexism, thinkers who persist in their struggle to the end, until their lungs give out. Without obfuscating their differences, the book makes it palpable how this very diversity of approaches strengthens the common struggle. I’ve never seen a volume which combines multiple perspectives with a united strong commitment to emancipation. Until Our Lungs Give Out gives hope, and hope is what we need in our dark times.
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2/2/23, Choice: This book was included in a roundup of forthcoming titles in African American studies.Link: https://www.choice360.org/choice-pick/forthcoming-titles-in-african-american-studies-2023/

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781538176429
Publisert
2023-09-15
Utgiver
Vendor
Rowman & Littlefield
Vekt
712 gr
Høyde
230 mm
Bredde
160 mm
Dybde
28 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
396

Forfatter
Foreword by

Om bidragsyterne

George Yancy is the author, editor, and co-editor of over 20 books, including Backlash: What Happens When we Talk Honestly About Racism in America. He is known for his influential essays and interviews in the New York Times' philosophy column, The Stone. Adding to his many awards in recognitions, in March 2022, Yancy was honored to discover an anonymous muralist known as “Belove” had painted Yancy’s larger-the-life portrait in downtown Denver. Yancy lives in Atlanta, Georgia, where he is professor of philosophy at Emory University.