Postracial Fantasies and Zombies: On the Racist Apocalyptic Politics Devouring the World

Eric King Watts
University of California Press

Eric King Watts examines key moments when Blackness became an object of knowledge in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, preparing the "scientific" and philosophical ground for interpreting zombie lore. The book treats the "Greater Caribbean" as a transformative space in which an antiblack infrastructure arose and interrogates the US's militarized domination of Haiti that was the context in which the zombie emerged. Watts traces variations of the form and function of the zombie to contemplate how it matters to our contemporary struggles with racism and pandemic policies.

Read more at University of California Press

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Black Prison Intellectuals: Writings from the Long Nineteenth Century

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The End of Respectability: Notes of a Black American Reckoning with His Life and His Nation