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Informationen zum Autor Edited by George Yancy and Janine Jones Klappentext On February 26, 2012, seventeen-year-old African American male Trayvon Martin was shot and killed by George Zimmerman, a twenty-eight-year-old white Hispanic American male in Sanford, Florida. Zimmerman killed Martin in a gated community. Pursuing Trayvon Martin: Historical Contexts and Contemporary Manifestations of Racial Dynamics, featuring a new preface by editors George Yancy and Janine Jones written after the June 2013 trial, examines the societal conditions that fueled the shooting and its ramifications for race relations and violence in America.Pursuing Trayvon Martin: Historical Contexts and Contemporary Manifestations of Racial Dynamics attempts to capture what a critical cadre of scholars think about this potentially volatile situation in the moment. The text addresses issues across various thematic domains that are both broad and relevant. Pursuing Trayvon Martin is an important read for scholars in the fields of philosophy, criminal justice, history, critical race theory, political science, critical philosophies of race, gender studies, sociology, rhetorical studies, and for anyone hungry for critical ways of thinking about the Trayvon Martin case. Inhaltsverzeichnis About the ContributorsIntroductionChapter 1: Now You See It, Now You Don't: Magic Tricks of White Supremacy in the U.S. Chapter 2: Imagined Communities: Whitopia and the Trayvon Martin Tragedy Chapter 3: Indignity and Death: Philosophical Commentary on White Terror, Black Death and the Trayvon Martin TragedyChapter 4: No Bigots Required: What the Science of Racial Bias Reveals in the Wake of Travyon MartinChapter 5: Two Forms of Transcendence: Justice and the Problem of Knowledge in the Trayvon Martin CaseChapter 6: The Irreplaceability of Continued StruggleChapter 7: Dead Black Man, Just Walking Chapter 8: Distorted Vision and Deadly Speech: Enabling Racial Violence through Paradox and ScriptChapter 9: "Seeing Black" through Michel Foucault's Eyes: "Stand Your Ground" Laws as an Anchorage Point for State-Sponsored RacismChapter 10: Should Black Kids Avoid Wearing Hoodies?Chapter 11: Can We Imagine This Happening to a White Boy?Chapter 12: A Mother's Pain: The Toxicity of the Systemic Disease of Devaluation Transferred from the Black Mother to the Black Male Child Chapter 13: Social Presence, Visibility, and the Eye of the Beholder: A Phenomenology of Social EmbodimentChapter 14: Trayvon Martin, Racism, and the Dilemma of the African American ParentChapter 15: Refusing Blackness-as-Victimization: Trayvon Martin and the Black CyborgsChapter 16: Politics, Moral Identity, and the Limits of White SilenceChapter 17: Trayvon Martin and the Tragedy of the New Jim Crow Chapter 18: "What Are You Doing Around Here?": Trayvon Martin and the Logic of Black GuiltChapter 19: Trayvon Martin: When Effortless Grace is Sacrificed on the Altar of the ImageCoda: Through the eyes of a mother: Reflections on the rites of passage of black boyhood...