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This is the 30th Anniversary Edition of Lewis R. Gordon's classic existential phenomenological inaugural work,
Bad Faith and Antiblack Racism. Gordon argues that antiblack racism is an effort to evade the responsibilities of building a human and humane world. He explores how bad faith is manifested across race, gender, and class, among varieties of other human phenomena. The new edition contains a foreword by Mabogo P. More and afterwords by Jacqueline M. Martinez and Paget Henry.
List of contents
Prefaceby Lewis Gordon
Introduction by Mabogo P. More
Introduction: Why Bad Faith?
Part 1: Bad Faith
A "Determined" Attitude That Involves Lying to Ourselves
The Irony of Belief
Anguish
The Elusiveness of Transcendence and the Comfort of Facticity
What Am I to Me?
Taking Ourselves Too Seriously
The Body in Bad Faith
"Strong" and "Weak" Bad Faith
Some Critical Remarks
How Is Bad Faith Possible?
The Question of Authenticity
Part 2: Logic of Racism, Racist Logic
A Recent Theory
Racialism, Racism, Racialists, and Racists
Affective Dimensions of Racism and Race
Part 3: Antiblack Racism
Racism and Antiblack Racism
White and Black Bodies in Bad Faith
Black Antiblackness in an Antiblack World
Exoticism: Antiblackness Under the Guise of Love
Effeminacy: The Quality of Black Beings
Antiblack Racism and Ontology
Part 4: "God" in an Antiblack World
An Antiblack Cosmogony
"Is God a White Racist?"
The White God and the Black Sufferer
Ultimate Desire and Authenticity in an Antiblack World
To Be Black, Faithful, and Suffering
Part 5: Critical Encounters
"I-Thou"
Ethical Concerns
Deconstruction
Marxism
Conclusion: The Living Dead
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the author
Lewis R. Gordon is Professor of Philosophy and Africana Studies at the University of Connecticut, visiting Professor at the University of the West Indies at Mona, Jamaica, Nelson Mandela, visiting Professor at Rhodes University, South Africa, European Union Visiting Chair in Philosophy at Université Toulouse Jean Jaurès, France, and Writer-in-Residence at Birkbeck School of Law. His most recent book is What Fanon Said: A Philosophical Introduction to His Life and Thought (2015).Mabogo Percy More is a former professor of philosophy at the University of KwaZulu-Natal and is currently professor of philosophy at the University of Limpopo, South Africa. He is the author of many journal articles and his latest book is Steve Biko: Philosophy, Identity and Liberation (HSRC Press, 2017). He was awarded the Frantz Fanon Lifetime Achievement award by the Caribbean Philosophical Association in 2015.