Habeas Viscus by Alexander Weheliye

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HABEAS VISCUS

RACIALIZING ASSEMBLAGES, BIOPOLITICS,


AND BLACK FEMINIST THEORIES OF THE HUMAN
ALEXANDER G. WEHELIYE
© 2014 Duke University Press
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
on acid-­free paper ∞
Designed by Amy Ruth Buchanan
Typeset in Quadraat by Copperline Book Services, Inc.

Library of Congress Cataloging-­in-­Publication Data


Weheliye, Alexander G., 1968 – 
Habeas viscus : racializing assemblages, biopolitics, and
black feminist theories of  the human / Alexander G. Weheliye.
pages cm
Includes bibliographical references and index.
isbn 978-­0-­8223-­5691-­2 (cloth : alk. paper)
isbn 978-­0-­8223-­5701-­8 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. African Americans — Study and teaching.  2. Blacks —
 Study and teaching.  3. Feminist theory.  4. Spillers,
Hortense J.  5. Wynter, Sylvia.  I. Title.
e184.7.w43 2014
305.4201 — dc23
2014000761

Cover art: Wangechi Mutu, Untitled, 2002. Collage, ink on


paper, 12 3 9 inches. Courtesy of the artist.
CONTENTS

Acknowledgments  ix

INTRODUCTION : Now  1
1 BLACKNESS : The Human  17
2 BARE LIFE : The Flesh  33
3 ASSEMBLAGES : Articulation  46
4 RACISM : Biopolitics  53
5 LAW : Property  74
6 DEPRAVATION : Pornotropes  89
7 DEPRIVATION : Hunger  113
8 FREEDOM : Soon  125

Notes  139

Bibliography  181

Index  205
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I thank the following individuals, who either read or discussed parts of  the
book with me, for their valuable insights: Richard Iton, Ruth Wilson-­Gilmore,
Fred Moten, Saidiya Hartman, Dylan Rodriguez, Katherine McKittrick, An-
drea Smith, Alondra Nelson, Dwight McBride, Hortense Spillers, Jodi Kim,
John Keene, Nicola Lauré Al-­Samarai, Joseph Chaves, Ulla Haselstein, Ewa
Ziarek, Annette Schlichter, Anna Parkinson, Samuel Weber, and the anony-
mous readers at Duke University Press. Many thanks also to the participants
in the uchri research group Between Life and Death: Necropolitics in the
Era of  Late Capitalism, as well as the audiences at Reading Race Today at
Brown University, Critical Ethnic Studies Conference at uc Riverside, the
Program in American Studies and Ethnicity at usc, the John F. Kennedy In-
stitute for American Studies at the Free University Berlin, the English De-
partment at University of  Wisconsin – Madison, the annual meetings of  the
American Studies and Modern Language Association, the Comparative Lit-
erature Department at uc Irvine, and the faculty colloquium in the English
Department at Northwestern for allowing me to test out the ideas of  the
book and for their valuable feedback. Of course, I am extremely thankful
for Sylvia Wynter’s and Hortense Spillers’s brilliance in charting the paths
of  future inquiry, of what needs to be done, for us.
While producing Habeas Viscus, I learned a great deal from the graduate
students in my seminars Man and Animal, Terror and Freedom, Post-­soul
Blackness, and Expressive Arts and Culture, especially Rickey Fayne, Brittnay
Proctor, Cecilio Cooper, Chad Benito Infante, Mohwanah Fetus, Jared
Richardson, Pablo Lopez-­Oro, Sam Tenorio, La TaSha Levy, and Keeanga
Taylor. Special thanks to Nora Eltahawy for proofreading an earlier version
of  the manuscript, to Cecilio Cooper and Christine Goding for preparing
the index, and to Ken Wissoker, Jade Brooks, and Christine Choi at Duke
University Press for their work in bringing this book to publication.
Many thanks to my colleagues in the Department of African American
Studies at Northwestern: John Marquez, Celeste Watkins-­Hayes, Sherwin
Bryant, Mary Pattillo, E. Patrick Johnson, Nitasha Sharma, Sylvester Johnson,
Barnor Hesse, Martha Biondi, Sandra Richards, Darlene Clark Hine, Mi-
chelle Wright, and Tracy Vaughn. Much gratitude also goes out to Marjorie
McDonald, Suzette Denose, and Kathy Daniels. Parts of  the book have been
published previously in the following journals: an earlier and shorter in-
carnation of chapter 6 appeared as “Pornotropes” in Journal of  Visual Culture
7.1 (April 2008), while other sections of  Habeas Viscus incorporate materi-
als from my essay “After Man,” which appeared in American Literary History
20.1 – 2 (spring 2008).
Finally, I owe immense gratitude to my family: Barbara Christine and
Nur Ahmed Weheliye, Samatar, Ayaan, and Asli Weheliye, Daud Ahmed
and Qadiiya Isaac, Asli-­Juliya Weheliye, Jan Wiklund, Safiya Weheliye, Said
Ahmed, Eedo Biod and Eedo Safia, as well as my friends Patrick Hosp, Roya
Djaberwandi, Arndt Weisshuhn, Aki Hanne, Andrea Wiedermann, Christian
Schwabe, Jamila Al-­Habash, Patricia Bembo, Manfred Bertelmann, and
Sonja Boerdner.
This book is dedicated to my daughters, Marlena and Aaliya.

x  Acknowledgments
INTRODUCTION: NOW

On the one hand, Habeas Viscus is concerned with rectifying the short-
comings of  “bare life and biopolitics discourse,” and on the other hand,
it suggests — from the vantage point of  black studies — alternate ways of
conceptualizing the place of race, or racializing assemblages, within the
dominion of modern politics. Focusing on the layered interconnected-
ness of political violence, racialization, and the human, I contend that the
concepts of  bare life and biopolitics, which have come to dominate con-
temporary scholarly considerations of  these questions, are in dire need
of recalibration if we want to understand the workings of and abolish our
extremely uneven global power structures defined by the intersections of
neoliberal capitalism, racism, settler colonialism, immigration, and impe-
rialism, which interact in the creation and maintenance of systems of dom-
ination; and dispossession, criminalization, expropriation, exploitation,
and violence that are predicated upon hierarchies of racialized, gendered,
sexualized, economized, and nationalized social existence.1 Although my
argument resides in the same conceptual borough as Agamben’s bare life,
Foucault’s biopolitics, Patterson’s social death, and, to a certain extent,
Mbembe’s necropolitics, it differs significantly from them, because, as I
show later, these concepts, seen individually and taken as a group, neglect
and/or actively dispute the existence of alternative modes of  life alongside
the violence, subjection, exploitation, and racialization that define the
modern human.
Building on Hortense Spillers’s distinction between body and flesh and
the writ of  habeas corpus, I use the phrase habeas viscus — “You shall have
the flesh” — on the one hand, to signal how violent political domination
activates a fleshly surplus that simultaneously sustains and disfigures said
brutality, and, on the other hand, to reclaim the atrocity of  flesh as a pivotal
arena for the politics emanating from different traditions of  the oppressed.
The flesh, rather than displacing bare life or civil death, excavates the social
(after)life of  these categories: it represents racializing assemblages of sub-
jection that can never annihilate the lines of  flight, freedom dreams, prac-
tices of  liberation, and possibilities of other worlds. Nonetheless, genres
of  the human I discuss in Habeas Viscus ought not to be understood within
the lexicons of resistance and agency, because, as explanatory tools, these
concepts have a tendency to blind us, whether through strenuous denials or
exalted celebrations of  their existence, to the manifold occurrences of  free-
dom in zones of  indistinction. As modes of analyzing and imagining the
practices of  the oppressed in the face of extreme violence — although this
is also applicable more broadly — resistance and agency assume full, self-­
present, and coherent subjects working against something or someone.
Which is not to say that agency and resistance are completely irrelevant in
this context, just that we might come to a more layered and improvisatory
understanding of extreme subjection if we do not decide in advance what
forms its disfigurations should take on.
When I initially began thinking about this book I wondered about the
very basic possibility of agency and/or resistance in extreme circumstances
such as slave plantations or concentration camps. The initial inquiry, then,
led me to broader methodological questions facing minority discourse:
Why are formations of  the oppressed deemed liberatory only if  they resist
hegemony and/or exhibit the full agency of  the oppressed? What deforma-
tions of  freedom become possible in the absence of resistance and agency?
I don’t intend for Habeas Viscus to provide final answers to these questions as
much as to ask them in novel ways and leave the resulting fragments rever-
berating around the room of collective scholarly inquiry with the hope that
we will be able to pose the problem of subjection qua agency and resistance
in different, heretofore nonexistent ways. How might we go about thinking
and living enfleshment otherwise so as to usher in different genres of  the

2  Introduction
human and how might we accomplish this task through the critical project
of  black studies?
I locate my argument principally within black studies as a (non)disci-
plinary formation that brings to the fore blackness, and racializing assem-
blages more generally, as one of  the major political, cultural, social, and eco-
nomic spaces of exception, although clearly not the only one, within modern
western humanity. Nevertheless, my points are also relevant to and draw
on other forms of racialized minority discourse (Asian American studies,
Latino/a studies, ethnic studies, Native American studies, postcolonial stud-
ies, etc.). Overall, I construe race, racialization, and racial identities as on-
going sets of political relations that require, through constant perpetuation
via institutions, discourses, practices, desires, infrastructures, languages,
technologies, sciences, economies, dreams, and cultural artifacts, the bar-
ring of nonwhite subjects from the category of  the human as it is performed
in the modern west.
While black studies became an institutional and disciplinary formation
in the mainstream U.S. university in the 1960s, it has existed since the eigh-
teenth century as a set of  intellectual traditions and liberation struggles that
have borne witness to the production and maintenance of  hierarchical dis-
tinctions between groups of  humans. Viewed in this light, black studies rep-
resents a substantial critique of western modernity and a sizeable archive of
social, political, and cultural alternatives. As an intellectual enterprise, black
studies investigates processes of racialization with a particular emphasis on
the shifting configurations of  blackness. If racialization is understood not
as a biological or cultural descriptor but as a conglomerate of sociopoliti-
cal relations that discipline humanity into full humans, not-­quite-­humans,
and nonhumans, then blackness designates a changing system of unequal
power structures that apportion and delimit which humans can lay claim
to full human status and which humans cannot. Conversely, “white su-
premacy may be understood as a logic of social organization that produces
regimented, institutionalized, and militarized conceptions of  hierarchized
‘human’ difference.”2 Although much of  the critical, poetic, and quanti-
tative work generated under the auspices of  black studies has been con-
cerned with the experiences, life worlds, struggles, and cultural productions
of  black populations around the world, the theoretical and methodological
protocols of  black studies have always been global in their reach, because
they provide detailed explanations of  how techniques of domination, dis-

Now  3
possession, expropriation, exploitation, and violence are predicated upon
the hierarchical ordering of racial, gender, sexual, economic, religious, and
national differences. Since blackness has functioned as one of  the key signi-
fiers for the sociopolitical articulation of  visual distinctions among human
groups in modernity, black studies has developed a series of comprehensive
analytical frameworks — both critical and utopian — in the service of  better
understanding and dismantling the political, economic, cultural, and social
exploitation of  visible human difference. In sum, black studies illuminates
the essential role that racializing assemblages play in the construction of
modern selfhood, works toward the abolition of  Man, and advocates the
radical reconstruction and decolonization of what it means to be human.
In doing so, black studies pursues a politics of global liberation beyond the
genocidal shackles of  Man.3
As will become evident, habeas viscus is but one modality of  imagin-
ing the relational ontological totality of  the human. Yet in order to consider
habeas viscus as an object of  knowledge in the service of producing new
formations of  humanity, we must venture past the perimeters of  bare life
and biopolitics discourse and the juridical history of  habeas corpus, because
neither sufficiently addresses how deeply anchored racialization is in the so-
matic field of  the human. Where bare life and biopolitics discourse aspires
to transcend racialization via recourse to absolute biological matter that no
longer allows for portioning of  humanity or locating certain forms of rac-
ism in an unidentified elsewhere, habeas corpus, and the law in general, at
least when it is not administering racial distinctions, tends to recognize the
humanity of racialized subjects only in the restricted idiom of personhood-­
as-­ownership. Bare life and biopolitics discourse not only misconstrues
how profoundly race and racism shape the modern idea of  the human, it
also overlooks or perfunctorily writes off  theorizations of race, subjection,
and humanity found in black and ethnic studies, allowing bare life and bio-
politics discourse to imagine an indivisible biological substance anterior
to racialization. The idea of racializing assemblages, in contrast, construes
race not as a biological or cultural classification but as a set of sociopolitical
processes that discipline humanity into full humans, not-­quite-­humans,
and nonhumans.
Habeas Viscus contains extended discussions of  the weaknesses inher-
ent in the specter of  bare life and biopolitics discourse that haunts current
scholarly debates in the Anglo-­American humanities and social sciences.

4  Introduction
However, this book’s theoretical design owes much of  its fuel to Hortense
Spillers’s and Sylvia Wynter’s important mediations about the intellectual
project of  black studies vis-­à-­vis racialization and the category of  the human
in western modernity.4 Wynter and Spillers configure black studies as an
intellectual endeavor, even though acutely attuned to its institutional quirks,
whose principal goal is to disrupt the governing conception of  humanity
as synonymous with western Man, while also supplying the analytic tools
for thinking the deeply gendered and sexualized provenances of racializing
assemblages. Moreover, I draw on Wynter’s and Spillers’s work in order to
highlight and impede the precarious status of  black feminism in the acad-
emy and beyond, since black feminism has sustained African American cul-
tural theory at the same time as it has grounded the institutional existence
of  black studies for the last few decades but is nevertheless continually dis-
avowed. According to Ann DuCille, black feminist theory is not conceived
of as a serious field of  inquiry by denying that black feminism represents
“a discipline with a history and a body of rigorous scholarship and distin-
guished scholars underpinning it”; instead outsiders imagine it to be “an
anybody-­can-­play pick-­up game performed on a wide-­open, untrammeled
field.”5 My extensive exegeses of Spillers’s and Wynter’s “body of rigorous
scholarship” in the pages that follow represent one way to counteract this
methodical disremembering of  the intellectual contributions black femi-
nism has made to black studies and knowledge production in the academy
tout court.
In addition, Wynter’s and Spillers’s reconceptualizations of race, subjec-
tion, and humanity provide indispensable correctives to Agamben’s and Fou-
cault’s considerations of racism vis-­à-­vis biopolitics. In this vein, I argue that
black studies and other formations of critical ethnic studies provide crucial
viewpoints, often overlooked or actively neglected in bare life and biopoli-
tics discourse, in the production of racialization as an object of  knowledge,
especially in its interfacing with political violence and (de)humanization.
Rather than using biopolitics as a modality of analysis that supersedes or
sidelines race, I stress that race be placed front and center in considerations
of political violence, albeit not as a biological or cultural classification but
as a set of sociopolitical processes of differentiation and hierarchization,
which are projected onto the putatively biological human body. Even if dis-
tinctions among different groups of  humans are based not on race but on
nationality or religion, for instance, there exists no such thing as an absolute

Now  5
biopolitical substance, because those differentiations not only obey the pro-
cedural tenets of racializing assemblages but also very often are translated to
visual phenomena. Racializing assemblages represent, among other things,
the visual modalities in which dehumanization is practiced and lived. In this
way, the conceptual tools of racialized minority discourse augment and re-
frame bare life and biopolitics discourse, because they focus on the nexus of
differentiation, hierarchy, and the human, and ultimately on devising new
forms of  human life that are not constructed from the noxious concoction
of racialization and/as political violence.
I am belaboring this point because Foucault’s and Agamben’s ideas
are frequently invoked without scrutinizing the historical, philosophical,
or political foundations upon which they are constructed, which bespeaks
a broader tendency in which theoretical formulations by white European
thinkers are granted a conceptual carte blanche, while those uttered from
the purview of minority discourse that speak to the same questions are al-
most exclusively relegated to the jurisdiction of ethnographic locality. The
challenges posed to the smooth operations of western Man since the 1960s
by continental thought and minority discourse, though, as I discuss later,
historically, conceptually, institutionally, and politically relational, still tend
to be segregated, because minority discourses seemingly cannot inhabit the
space of proper theoretical reflection. This applies especially to the critical
conversations about bare life and biopolitics given that they revolve around
racism, genocide, legal exclusion, torture, and humanity, for instance,
topics which have been debated and theorized in black and critical ethnic
studies for some time. The concepts of  Foucault and Agamben are deemed
transposable to a variety of spatiotemporal contexts because the authors do
not speak from an explicitly racialized viewpoint (in contradistinction to
nonwhite scholars who have written about racial slavery, colonialism, in-
digenous genocide, etc.), which lends their ideas more credibility and, once
again, displaces minority discourse.6 If I didn’t know any better, I would
suppose that scholars not working in minority discourse seem thrilled that
they no longer have to consult the scholarship of nonwhite thinkers now
that European master subjects have deigned to weigh in on these topics. As
Junot Díaz remarks: “Women-­of-­color writers were raising questions about
the world, about power, about philosophy, about politics, about history,
about white supremacy, because of  their raced, gendered, sexualized bodies;
they were wielding a genius that had been cultivated out of  their raced, gen-

6  Introduction
dered, sexualized subjectivities. . . . That these women are being forgotten,
and their historical importance elided, says a lot about our particular mo-
ment and how real a threat these foundational sisters posed to the order
of  things.”7 Yet because women-­of-­color writers articulate their critiques as
a result of and in relation to their identities, the knowledge they produce
is often relegated to ethnographic locality within mainstream discourses.
Bare life and biopolitics discourse in particular is plagued by a strong
“anti – identity politics” strain in the Anglo-­American academy in its posi-
tioning of  bare life and biopolitics as uncontaminated by and prior to reduc-
tive or essentialist political identities such as race or gender.8 Supposing that
analyses of race and racism are inherently essentialist where those concern-
ing bare life and biopolitics are not — because they do not suitably resemble
real-­world identities — allows bare life and biopolitics to appear as unaf-
fected by identitarian locality and thus as proper objects of  knowledge. This
occurs because the ideas of white European theorists are not regarded as
affectable by a “critical consciousness” that would open them “up towards
historical reality, toward society, toward human needs and interests, to point
up those concrete instances drawn from everyday reality that lie outside or
just beyond the interpretive area.”9 Traveling theories, particularly those
supposedly transparent and universal soldiers in Man’s philosophical army,
should be exposed to and reconstructed not only according to the factors
Edward Said mentions, but also in concordance with a critical conscious-
ness that probes the conceptual constraints of  these theories, especially as
it pertains to the analytics of race and exhumes their historico-­geographical
affectability.10 I am by no means contending that black and critical ethnic
studies scholars should not engage the thought of Agamben and Foucault,
nor am I emphasizing and bemoaning the exclusion of race from these con-
ceptual apparatuses; rather I show how Foucault and Agamben, by placing
racial difference in a field prior to and at a distance from conceptual contem-
plation, inscribe race as a “real object” or a “primitive notion.”11 In doing
so, I want to underscore just how comprehensively the coloniality of  Man
suffuses the disciplinary and conceptual formations of  knowledge we labor
under, and how far we have yet to go in decolonizing these structures.12 This
is especially unfortunate, and perhaps a result of  the fact that most of  the re-
cent innovative impulses in critical theory have been formulated within the
context of (racialized) minority discourse (black and critical ethnic studies,
postcolonial theory, queer theory, etc.).

Now  7
Since bare life and biopolitics discourse largely occludes race as a critical
category of analysis, as do many other current articulations of critical theory,
it cannot provide the methodological instruments for diagnosing the tight
bonds between humanity and racializing assemblages in the modern era.
The volatile rapport between race and the human is defined above all by two
constellations: first, there exists no portion of  the modern human that is not
subject to racialization, which determines the hierarchical ordering of  the
Homo sapiens species into humans, not-­quite-­humans, and nonhumans;
second, as a result, humanity has held a very different status for the tradi-
tions of  the racially oppressed. Man will only be abolished “like a face drawn
in sand at the edge of  the sea” if we disarticulate the modern human (Man)
from its twin: racializing assemblages.13 My principal question, phrased
plainly, is: what different modalities of  the human come to light if we do not
take the liberal humanist figure of  Man as the master-­subject but focus on
how humanity has been imagined and lived by those subjects excluded from
this domain? Some scholars associated with black and critical ethnic studies
have begun to undertake the project of  thinking humanity from perspec-
tives beyond the liberal humanist subject, Man.14 There humanity emerges
as an object of  knowledge, which offers the means of conceptualizing
how the human materializes in the worlds of  those subjects habitually not
thought to define or belong to this field. The greatest contribution to criti-
cal thinking of  black studies — and critical ethnic studies more generally — 
is the transformation of  the human into a heuristic model and not an on-
tological fait accompli, which seems particularly important in our current
historical moment.
Though the human as a secular entity of scientific and humanistic in-
quiry has functioned as a central topos of modernity since the Renaissance,
questions of  humanity have gained importance in the academy and beyond
in the wake of recent technological developments, especially the advent
of  biotechnology and the proliferation of  informational media. These dis-
cussions, which in critical discourses in the humanities and social sciences
have relied heavily on the concepts of  the cyborg and the posthuman, largely
do not take into account race as a constitutive category in thinking about
the parameters of  humanity. Reading thinkers such as Jacques Derrida,
Michel Foucault, or Louis Althusser today, one cannot help but notice the
manifesto-­like character of  their writings, historicizing the western concep-
tion of  Man (Foucault), providing a more scientific, nonhumanist version

8  Introduction
of  Marxism (Althusser), or attempting to think at the limits of  humanism
while being aware that this just reinscribes the centrality of  Man (Derrida).
Going back further, the axial project of  linguistic, anthropological, and
literary structuralism that emerged in the aftermath of  World War II was
to displace a holistic notion of  the human through various structural fea-
tures that constitute, frame, and interpellate Man. We can also locate these
tendencies in the German philosophical traditions that inspired a number
of poststructuralist projects, or, for that matter, in the works of Sigmund
Freud, Karl Marx, and Ferdinand de Saussure. These thinkers, however, are
hardly regarded as posthumanist philosophers; instead they are classified
as “antihumanist.”15
Here we would do well to retrieve the deracination of post-­structuralism
once annexed by the U.S. academy in the 1970s and rechristened as “the-
ory.” As Pal Ahluwalia and Robert Young among others have shown, the
Algerian war in particular, and decolonization in general, provided the im-
petus for a generation of  French intellectuals (Jacques Derrida, Pierre Bour-
dieu, Hélène Cixous, and Jean-François Lyotard, for example, who would
later be associated with post-­structuralism), to dismantle western thought
and subjectivity.16 The nearly simultaneous eruptions of ethnic studies and
post-­structuralism in the American university system have been noted by
critics such as Hortense Spillers and Wlad Godzich, yet these important
convergences hardly register on the radar of mainstream debates.17 That is
to say that the challenges posed to the smooth operations of western Man
since the 1960s by continental thought and minority discourse, though his-
torically, conceptually, institutionally, and politically relational, tend to be
segregated, because minority discourses seemingly cannot inhabit the space
of proper theoretical reflection, which is why thinkers such as Foucault and
Agamben need not reference the long traditions of  thought in this domain
that are directly relevant to biopolitics and bare life.
We also find this in current studies of posthumanism associated with the-
ories of  technological virtuality, as well as in the embryonic field of animal
studies. In these modes of  inquiry, Man interfaces with a plethora of  infor-
mational technologies, or in the case of animal studies sheds its superiority
complex vis-­à-­vis nonhuman animals, and enters into the space and time
of  the posthuman. Moreover, many invocations of posthumanism, whether
in antihumanist post-­structuralist theorizing or in current considerations
of  technology and animality, reinscribe the humanist subject (Man) as the

Now  9
personification of  the human by insisting that this is the category to be over-
come, rarely considering cultural and political formations outside the world
of  Man that might offer alternative versions of  humanity.18 Moreover, post-
humanism and animal studies isomorphically yoke humanity to the limited
possessive individualism of  Man, because these discourses also presume
that we have now entered a stage in human development where all subjects
have been granted equal access to western humanity and that this is, indeed,
what we all want to overcome. It is remarkable, for instance, how the (not
so) dreaded comparison between human and animal slavery is brandished
about in the field of animal studies and how black liberation struggles serve
as both the positive and negative foil for making a case for the sentience
and therefore emancipation of nonhuman beings.19 This sleight of  hand
comes easy to those critics attempting to achieve animal rights and is fre-
quently articulated comparatively vis-­à-­vis black subjects’ enslavement in
the Americas — “the moral and intellectual jujitsu that yielded the catachre-
sis, person-­as-­property.”20
When I taught a graduate seminar on the human and animal a few years
ago, I was struck both by how frequently this comparison appeared in recent
critical texts associated with animal studies and how carelessly — and often
defensively — this comparative analogy was brandished about in this area
of  inquiry. Here is one of  the more spiteful instances of  this current:

In Toni Morrison’s eloquent meditation . . . she argues that the hallmarks


of  the individualist imagination in the founding of United States cul-
ture — “autonomy, authority, newness and difference, absolute power” — 
are all “made possible by, and shaped by, activated by a complex aware-
ness and employment of a constituted Africanism,” which in turn has
as its material condition of possibility the white man’s “absolute power
over the lives of others” in the fact of slavery. My point here, however, . . .
is to take Morrison very seriously at her word — and then some. For what
does it mean when the aspiration of  human freedom, extended to all,
regardless of race or class or gender, has as its material condition of pos-
sibility absolute control over the lives of nonhuman others?21

Given that Morrison mentions neither the subjugation nor liberation of


animals, it remains unclear why her ideas about blackness and chattel
slavery are summoned here, why the aspiration for human freedom would
ineludibly lead to the subjugation of nonhuman others, and why black

10  Introduction
subjects — rather than, say, slave owners — must bear the burden of repre-
senting the final frontier of speciesism. In supposing that all human sub-
jects occupy the space of  humanity equally, post-­ and antihumanist dis-
courses cannot conceptualize how “the transubstantiation of  the captive
into the volitional subject, chattel into proprietor, and the circumscribed
body of  blackness into the disembodied and abstract universal seems im-
probable, if not impossible.”22 Much post-­1960s critical theorizing either
assumes that black subjects have been fully assimilated into the human qua
Man or continues to relegate the thought of nonwhite subjects to the ground
of ethnographic specificity, yet as Aimé Césaire has so rightfully observed,
“The West has never been further from being able to live a true humanism — 
a humanism made to the measure of  the world.”23
Turning to the problematic of  black suffering in enslavement and be-
yond, I highlight how the universalization of exception disables thinking
humanity creatively. Because black suffering figures in the domain of  the
mundane, it refuses the idiom of exception. Mobilizing suffering that re-
sults from political violence as a conduit to new forms of  life, however,
requires some spatial and emotional distance from comparativity and the
exception, since both often contain trace elements of calculability that deem
some forms of  humanity more exceptional than others. Conversely, putting
into play interpretive devices such as the example and relation unearths
differential variants of  humanity severed from the dangling participles of
particularity and calculability. Moreover, because full access to legal person-
hood has been a systematic absence within racialized minority cultures, the
analyses of political violence that arise from them tend to neither describe
this brutality in the idiom of dehumanization nor make legal recognition
the focal point of redress. The conjoining of  flesh and habeas corpus in the
compound habeas viscus brings into view an articulated assemblage of  the
human (viscus/flesh) borne of political violence, while at the same time not
losing sight of  the different ways the law pugnaciously adjudicates who is
deserving of personhood and who is not (habeas).
That said, I am not making any claims about the desirability of  flesh,
the unmitigated agency it contains, or how it abolishes the violent politi-
cal structures at its root, but rather I investigate the breaks, crevices, move-
ments, languages, and such found in the zones between the flesh and the
law. Finally, I am by no means endorsing political wounding as it appears
in various human (and animal) rights discourses since the Enlightenment,

Now  11
where suffering becomes the defining feature of  those subjects excluded
from the law, national community, the human, and so on — while paradoxi-
cally also highlighting their equality with those ensconced firmly in the he-
gemonic sphere — insofar as it allows for recognition by the liberal state in
order to assuage this pain and therefore claim to free the oppressed. Since
the recognition of  black humanity via the conduit of suffering before and
subsequent to emancipation in the United States was used to subjugate
black subjects in much more insidious and elaborate ways than de facto en-
slavement, the questions “Aren’t I a Woman?” and “Am I not your brother?”
lose, at the very least, some of  their purchase.24
Habeas viscus suggests a technological assemblage of  humanity,
technology circumscribed here in the broadest sense as the application
of  knowledge to the practical aims of  human life or to changing and ma-
nipulating the human environment. Consequently, the figuration of  hu-
manity found in the tradition of  the oppressed represents a series of dis-
tinct assemblages of what it means to be human in the modern world.
The particular assemblage of  humanity under purview here is habeas vis-
cus, which, in contrast to bare life, insists on the importance of miniscule
movements, glimmers of  hope, scraps of  food, the interrupted dreams
of  freedom found in those spaces deemed devoid of  full human life (Guan-
tanamo Bay, internment camps, maximum security prisons, Indian reser-
vations, concentration camps, slave plantations, or colonial outposts, for
instance). Beyond the dominion of  the law, biopolitics, and bare life they
represent alternative critical, political, and poetic assemblages that are
often hushed in these debates. Habeas viscus accents how race becomes
pinioned to human physiology, exposing how the politicization of  the bi-
ological always already represents a racializing assemblage. Taking leave
from considering racial categorization as a mere ideological imposition
of scientifically “wrong” phenomena, habeas viscus, as an idea, networks
bodies, forces, velocities, intensities, institutions, interests, ideologies,
and desires in racializing assemblages, which are simultaneously territo-
rializing and deterritorializing.
Edouard Glissant describes relation as an open totality of movement,
which “is the boundless effort of  the world: to become realized in its total-
ity, that is, to evade rest.”25 Relation is not a waste product of established
components; rather, it epitomizes the constitutive potentiality of a totality
that is structured in dominance and composed of  the particular processes

12  Introduction
of  bringing-­into-­relation, which offer spheres of  interconnected existences
that are in constant motion. Relationality provides a productive model for
critical inquiry and political action within the context of  black and critical
ethnic studies, because it reveals the global and systemic dimensions of ra-
cialized, sexualized, and gendered subjugation, while not losing sight of  the
many ways political violence has given rise to ongoing practices of  freedom
within various traditions of  the oppressed. As Richard Iton states, one of  the
principal goals of  black politics has been “the always complicated struggle
to make plain these denials of relationality and the commitment to think-
ing reflexively with regard to the extended problem space that is the mod-
ern/colonial matrix and to positively value discursive spaces in which black
thoughts might occur.”26 Part of  this project is to think the question of po-
litically motivated acts of aggression in relational terms rather than through
the passages of comparison, deviance, exception, or particularity, since
they fail to adequately describe how specific instances of  the relations that
compose political violence realize articulations of an ontological totality:
the constitutive potentiality of a totality structured in dominance composed
of  the particular processes of  bringing-­into-­relation. More concretely, Lisa
Lowe has suggested that we can no longer disarticulate “the study of slavery
from immigration studies of Asians and Latinos or . . . separate the history
of gender, sexuality, and women from these studies of ‘race.’ Native Carib-
beans have been rendered invisible by both the histories that tell of  their
extermination in the sixteenth century and the subsequent racial classifica-
tions in which their survival is occluded.”27 While we should most definitely
bring into focus the relays betwixt and between the genocide of  indigenous
populations in the Americas, the transatlantic slave trade, Asian American
indentured servitude, and Latino immigration among many factors, we can-
not do so in the grammar of comparison, since this will merely reaffirm
Man’s existent hierarchies rather than design novel assemblages of relation.
While thinking through the political and institutional dimensions of  how
certain forms of  violence and suffering are monumentalized and others are
relegated to the margins of  history remains significant, their direct compar-
ison tends to lead to hierarchization and foreclose further discussion. Com-
parativity frequently serves as a shibboleth that allows minoritized groups
to gain recognition (and privileges, rights, etc.) from hegemonic powers
(through the law, for instance) who, as a general rule, only grant a certain
number of exceptions access to the spheres of  full humanity, sentience, cit-

Now  13
izenship, and so on. This, in turn, feeds into a discourse of putative scarcity
in which already subjugated groups compete for limited resources, leading
to a strengthening of  the very mechanisms that deem certain groups more
disposable or not-­quite-­human than others. In the resulting oppression
Olympics, white supremacy takes home all winning medals in every com-
petition.28 In other words, as long as numerous individuals and populations
around the globe continue to be rendered disposable by the pernicious log-
ics of racialization, and thus exposed to different forms of political violence
on a daily basis, it seems futile to tabulate, measure, or calculate their/our
suffering in the jargon of comparison.
Consequently, rather than assuming that suffering must always follow
the path of wounded attachments in search of recognition from the liberal
state, and therefore dismissing any form of politics that might arise from
the undergoing of political violence as inherently essentialist, my thinking
is more in line with a materialist reconceptualization of suffering.29 Asma
Abbas does not conscript minoritarian suffering to the realm of  individ-
ual ressentiment used in the service of gaining liberal personhood but, in-
stead, argues for an “understanding of suffering that allows us to honour
the suffering and hope of others not because we are humbled by their im-
penetrability and unknowability, but because of  how we see our sufferings
and our labours as co-­constitutive of  the world we inhabit, however home-
lessly.”30 Once suffering that results from political violence severs its ties
with liberal individualism, which would position this anguish in the realm
of a dehumanizing exception, we can commence to think of suffering and
enfleshment as integral to humanity. I emphasize the family ties between
political violence and suffering not because they are nobler or more wor-
thy than other forms of suffering, but because they usher us away from the
liberal notion of wounding that is at the core of modern western politics
and culture. Given the prominence of political violence within the histo-
ries of colonialism, indigenous genocide, racial slavery, internment, de jure
segregation, and so on, black studies and other incarnations of racialized
minority discourse offer pathways to distinctive understandings of suffering
that serve as the speculative blueprint for new forms of  humanity, which are
defined above all by overdetermined conjurings of  freedom. Overall, I am
asking whether there exists freedom (not necessarily as a commonsensically
positive category, but as a way to think what it makes possible) in this pain
that most definitely cannot be reduced to mere recognition based on the

14  Introduction
alleviation of  injury or redressed by the laws of  the liberal state, and if said
freedom might lead to other forms of emancipation, which can be imagined
but not (yet) described.
Habeas Viscus is not intended to be comprehensive or exhaustive; rather
it is purposefully written in an at times fragmentary and often suggestive
style in order to launch alternate ways of understanding our uneven plane-
tary conditions and imagine the other worlds these might make possible.
I have found stylistic and conceptual inspiration in the extensive archive of
collectively authored manifestos formulated by groups of modern racialized
subjects:

The Combahee River Collective Statement (1977)


Trail of Broken Treaties: For Renewal of Contracts — Reconstruction
of Indian Communities and Securing an Indian Future in America!
(1972)
We Charge Genocide: The Historic Petition to the United Nations for Relief  from a
Crime of  the United States Government against the Negro People (1951)
Alcatraz Proclamation: To the Great White Father and His People (1969)
Cannibal Manifesto (1928)
incite! Statement: Gender Violence and the Prison Industrial Com-
plex (2001)
El Plan Espiritual de Aztlan (1969)
Declaration of  the Rights of  the Negro Peoples of  the World: The Prin-
ciples of  the Universal Negro Improvement Association (1920)
Declaration on the Promotion of  World Peace and Co-­
operation — Bandung Conference (1955)
Third World Women’s Alliance, Black Woman’s Manifesto (n.d.)
The Emergence of Yellow Power in America (1969)
To Determine the Destiny of Our Black Community: The Black Panther
Party’s Ten Point Platform and Program (1966)
Zapatista Manifesto (1993)31

Though articulated for different purposes across distinctive geographical


terrains and historical coordinates, these credos point to a political, poetic,
and philosophical jurisdiction that has as its aim, to summon Hortense
Spillers’s formulation, “try[ing] to open the way to responsible freedom.”32
As politico-­theoretical reflections, these declarations of  interdependence
create alternate modalities of  freedom in the interstices of  the text, which

Now  15
while conjuring anterior futures also lay claim to and make demands in the
here-­and-­now. Moreover, given that what constitutes a scholarly mono-
graph but also the very basic notion of  the book form (as opposed to a
pamphlet, blog entry, a series of articles, and so on) has changed so radi-
cally over the last few years both inside and outside the academy, I wanted
Habeas Viscus to reflect, refract, and address these shifts structurally.33 But
instead of  looking primarily to contemporary technological changes in the
creation, distribution, and publishing of  textual artifacts, I turned to these
earlier manifestos in order to imagine future forms of writing and/as free-
dom. As such, the manifestos mentioned above provide templates for the
intermittently elliptical form of and disjunctive temporalities discussed in
Habeas Viscus, because “the tenses of colonization are never conjugated with
the verbs of an idyll.”34

16  Introduction
NOTES

INTRODUCTION

1 Besides the work of  Wynter and Spillers, my thinking about racialization is in-
debted to Frantz Fanon and W. E. B. Du Bois. See Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of  the
Earth, trans. Richard Philcox (1963; reprint, New York: Grove, 2004), 150; Frantz
Fanon, Black Skin, White Masks, trans. Richard Philcox (1952; reprint, New York:
Grove, 2008), 89 – 120; and W. E. B. Du Bois, The Souls of Black Folk [1903], ed. Don-
ald B. Gibson (New York: Penguin Classics, 1996), 3 – 12.
2 Dylan Rodríguez, Forced Passages: Imprisoned Radical Intellectuals and the U.S. Prison
Regime (Minneapolis: University of  Minnesota Press, 2006), 11.
3 Following Sylvia Wynter, I use Man to designate the modern, secular, and western
version of  the human that differentiates full humans from not-­quite-­humans and
nonhumans on the basis of  biology and economics.
4 As of April 2012, Google Scholar lists 19,800 entries for biopolitics, 11,400 for homo
sacer, and 8,790 for bare life but only 917 for necropolitics, 1,060 for Sylvia Wynter, and
2,050 for Hortense Spillers.
5 Ann DuCille, “The Occult of  True Black Womanhood: Critical Demeanor and
Black Feminist Studies,” Signs 19.3 (1994): 603.
6 Dwight McBride notices a similar tendency in the resonances between Foucault’s
conception of  historical discontinuities and the writings of  Toni Morrison and
Maxine Hong Kingston, writing, “Often much of what western theory imagines as
the ‘new’ can only be understood as such when the object of critique is delimited
so as not to include the cultural production of, or the experiences of, marginalized
subjects.” Dwight A. McBride, “The Ghosts of  Memory: Representing the Past in
Beloved and The Woman Warrior,” in Re-­placing America: Conversations and Contestations:
Selected Essays, ed. Ruth Hsu, Cynthia G. Franklin, and Suzanne Kosanke (Hono-
lulu: University of  Hawai‘i Press, 2000), 164.
7 Junot Díaz, “Díaz and Paula M.L. Moya: The Search for Decolonial Love, Part I,”
Boston Review, June 26, 2012.
8 Even though Agamben’s description of  bare life does not advocate it as a field
unscathed by political identities per se, it nevertheless lends itself  to this line
of  thinking, because this description imagines an alternative to bare life only in a
sphere of  indivisible ontological plenitude in the aftermath of  the most extreme
forms of political violence, for instance, in Agamben’s point about the Muselmann
as an “absolute biological substance” or in the consideration of a form of  life in
which it is no longer possible to sequester bare life from life as such. Giorgio
Agamben, Means without End: Notes on Politics, trans. Cesare Cesarino and Vincenzo
Binetti (Minneapolis: University of  Minnesota Press, 2000), 3 – 12.
9 Edward W. Said, “Traveling Theory,” in The World, the Text, and the Critic (Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, 1983), 241.
10 Within post-­Enlightenment European thought, Denise da Silva distinguishes
between the transparent white master subject of  Man and his various affectable
non-­European others. Global raciality, then, “produces both (a) the affectable
(subaltern) subjects that can be excluded from juridical universality without un-
leashing an ethical crisis and (b) the self-­determined things who should enjoy the
entitlements afforded and protected by the principle of universality said to govern
modern social configurations.” Denise Ferreira da Silva, Toward a Global Idea of  Race
(Minneapolis: University of  Minnesota Press, 2007), 35.
11 See Alfred Tarski, Introduction to Logic and to the Methodology of  Deductive Sciences, 4th
ed., ed. Jan Tarski (New York: Oxford University Press, 1936), 110.
12 On the coloniality of  being and knowledge in modernity, see Maria Lugones,
“Heterosexualism and the Colonial/Modern Gender System,” Hypatia 22.1 (2007):
186 – 219; Dipesh Chakrabarty, Provincializing Europe: Postcolonial Thought and Histor-
ical Difference (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2000); Kuan-­Hsing Chen,
Asia as Method: Toward Deimperialization (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2010);
Anibal Quijano, “Coloniality and Modernity/Rationality,” Cultural Studies 21.2 – 3
(2007): 168 – 78; Anibal Quijano, “Coloniality of  Power, Knowledge, and Latin
America,” Nepantla: Views from South 1.3 (2000): 533 – 80; Linda Tuhiwai Smith, De-
colonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples (London: Zed, 1999); Sylvia
Wynter, “Unsettling the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom: Towards the
Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation — an Argument,” cr: The New Centennial
Review 3.3 (2003): 257 – 337.

140  Notes to Introduction


13 Michel Foucault, The Order of  Things: Archaeology of  the Human Sciences, trans. Alan
Sheridan (New York: Vintage, 1970), 387.
14 Besides the thinkers discussed here, see Aihwa Ong, “Experiments with Freedom:
Milieus of  the Human,” American Literary History 18 (2006): 229 – 44; and Aihwa
Ong, Neoliberalism as Exception: Mutations in Citizenship and Sovereignty (Durham,
NC: Duke University Press, 2006); Ronald Judy, “Provisional Note on Formations
of  Planetary Violence,” boundary 2 33.3 (2006): 141 – 50; Walter Mignolo, “Citi-
zenship, Knowledge, and the Limits of  Humanity,” American Literary History 18.2
(2006): 312 – 31; Pheng Cheah, Inhuman Conditions: On Cosmopolitanism and Human
Rights (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006); Anupama Rao, “Violence
and Humanity: Or, Vulnerability as Political Subjectivity,” Social Research: An Interna-
tional Quarterly 78.2 (2011): 607 – 32; Paul Gilroy, Postcolonial Melancholia (New York:
Columbia University Press, 2005); Neferti M. Tadiar, “In the Face of  Whiteness
as Value: Fall-­Outs of  Metropolitan Humanness,” Qui Parle 13.2 (2003): 143 – 82;
and Neferti M. Tadiar, “Metropolitan Life and Uncivil Death,” pmla 122.1 (2007):
316 – 20; Katherine McKittrick, Demonic Grounds: Black Women and the Cartographies
of Struggle (Minneapolis: University of  Minnesota Press, 2006); R. Radhakrish-
nan, History, the Human, and the World Between (Durham, NC: Duke University
Press, 2008); Samera Esmeir, “On Making Dehumanization Possible,” pmla 121.5
(2006): 1544 – 51.
15 For a résumé of antihumanism’s genesis in post – World War II French intellectual
history thought, see Stefanos Geroulano, An Atheism That Is Not Humanist Emerges in
French Thought (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2010).
16 Important early interventions include Jacques Derrida, “The Ends of  Man” [1969],
in Margins of  Philosophy, trans. Alan Bass, 109 – 36 (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1982); and Jacques Derrida, “White Mythology: Metaphor in the Text of  Phi-
losophy” [1974], in Margins of  Philosophy, trans. Alan Bass, 207 – 71 (Chicago: Uni-
versity of Chicago Press, 1982); Foucault, The Order of  Things; Gilles Deleuze and
Félix Guattari’s invocation of Oedipus as an “interior colony” in Anti-­Oedipus: Cap-
italism and Schizophrenia, trans. Robert Hurley, Mark Seem, and Helen Lane (Min-
neapolis: University of  Minnesota Press, 1983). For the place of  the Algerian war
and decolonization in the genesis of post-­structuralism, see Robert Young, White
Mythologies: Writing History and the West (New York: Routledge, 2004); Pal Ahluwalia,
Out of Africa: Post-­structuralism’s Colonial Roots (New York: Routledge, 2010).
17 See Wlad Godzich, The Culture of  Literacy (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 1994); and Hortense J. Spillers, “The Crisis of  the Negro Intellectual: A
Post-­date,” in Black, White, and in Color: Essays on American Literature and Culture,
428 – 70 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003). See also Nahum D. Chan-
dler, “Originary Displacement,” boundary 2 27.3 (2000): 249 – 86. I have addressed
some of  these questions in the discussion of  “identity” and “the subject” as critical

Notes to Introduction  141


categories; see Alexander G. Weheliye, Phonographies: Grooves in Sonic Afro-­Modernity
(Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2005), 46 – 72.
18 See, for instance, N. Katherine Hayles, How We Became Posthuman: Virtual Bodies in
Cybernetics, Literature, and Informatics (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999).
For an elaboration of  the nexus between posthumanism and black culture, see Al-
exander G. Weheliye, “Feenin: Posthuman Voices in Contemporary Black Popular
Music,” Social Text 20.2 (2002): 21 – 47.
19 This is a reference to Marjorie Spiegel’s The Dreaded Comparison: Human and Animal
Slavery (Hong Kong: Mirror Books, 1996).
20 Hortense J. Spillers, “Introduction — Peter’s Pans: Eating in the Diaspora,” in
Black, White, and in Color: Essays on American Literature and Culture, 1 – 64 (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2003), 20.
21 Cary Wolfe, Animal Rites: American Culture, the Discourse of Species, and Posthumanist
Theory (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003), 7.
22 Saidiya V. Hartman, Scenes of Subjection: Terror, Slavery, and Self-­Making in Nineteenth-­
Century America (New York: Oxford University Press, 1997), 123.
23 Aimé Césaire, Discourse on Colonialism, trans. Joan Pinkham (1955; reprint, New
York: Monthly Review Press, 1972), 73.
24 Hartman, Scenes of Subjection, 5 – 10.
25 Édouard Glissant, Poetics of  Relation, trans. Betsy Wing (Ann Arbor: University
of  Michigan Press, 1997), 171 – 72.
26 Richard Iton, “Still Life,” Small Axe 17.1 40 (2013): 33.
27 Lisa M. Lowe, “The Intimacies of  the Four Continents,” in Haunted by Empire: Ge-
ographies of Global Intimacy in North American History, ed. Ann Laura Stoler (Durham,
NC: Duke University Press, 2006), 205. See also Grace Kyungwon Hong and Rod-
erick A. Ferguson, Strange Affinities: The Gender and Sexual Politics of Comparative Racial-
ization (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2011), especially Hong and Ferguson’s
introduction, which proposes an alternative mode of comparison — one based not
on similarity but difference — derived from women-­of-­color feminism and queer-­
of-­color critique. In addition to Glissant’s “poetics of relation,” I have found Stuart
Hall’s notion of  “articulation” and Deleuze and Guattari’s “assemblages” most
generative in devising noncomparative modes of  historical, economic, political,
and racial associations across seemingly disparate contexts.
28 Andrea Smith, “Heteropatriarchy and the Three Pillars of  White Supremacy,” in
Color of  Violence: The Incite! Anthology, ed. Incite! Women of Color against Violence,
66 – 73 (Boston: South End, 2006).
29 See Wendy Brown, States of Injury: Power and Freedom in Late Modernity (Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 1995), 52 – 76.
30 See Asma Abbas, Liberalism and Human Suffering: Materialist Reflections on Politics, Eth-
ics, and Aesthetics (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), 229.

142  Notes to Introduction


31 The manifestos mentioned in the text and others can be found at Beautone, http://
beautone.tumblr.com/search/manifesto.
32 Tim Haslett, “Hortense Spillers Interviewed by Tim Haslett for the Black Cultural
Studies Web Site Collective in Ithaca, NY,” February 4, 1998, accessed June 5, 2012,
http://www.blackculturalstudies.org/spillers/spillers_intvw.html.
33 See Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Planned Obsolescence: Publishing, Technology, and the Future
of  the Academy (New York: nyu Press, 2011).
34 Aimé Césaire, “Culture and Colonization,” trans. Brent Hayes Edwards (1956),
Social Text 28.2 103 (2010): 133.

1 BLACKNESS

1 C. L. R. James, “Black Studies and the Contemporary Student” [1969], in The C.L.R.
James Reader, ed. Anna Grimshaw (Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 1992), 397.
2 Spillers, “The Crisis of  the Negro Intellectual,” 464. Hereafter parenthetically cited
in the body of  the text. See also Hortense J. Spillers, “The Crisis of  the Black Intellec-
tual,” in A Companion to African-­American Philosophy, ed. Tommy Lee Lott and John P.
Pittman, 87 – 106 (Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2003).
3 See Louis Althusser and Étienne Balibar, Reading Capital, trans. Ben Brewster (Lon-
don: Verso, 1970), especially 34 – 52.
4 While I use blackness and black people to illustrate this particular point, for Spill-
ers, the community takes center stage as that which functions as a real object in
black studies when, in fact, it should be construed as an object of  knowledge (“The
Crisis of  the Negro Intellectual,” 457 – 58).
5 Althusser and Balibar, Reading Capital, 107.
6 Viewing race as an arrangement of relations that produces commonsensical ra-
cial identities corresponds to Teresa De Lauretis’s characterization of  the subject
of  feminism, which “is a theoretical construct (a way of conceptualizing, of un-
derstanding, of accounting for certain processes, not women).” Teresa De Lauretis,
Technologies of Gender: Essays on Theory, Film, and Fiction (Bloomington: Indiana Uni-
versity Press, 1987), 10.
7 Whenever I deploy the locutions black subject, blackness, or racialized subject, I do so
with regard to their attendant gendered and sexualized opacities and to the ways
in which they rest and transmute in history and geography.
8 I am using the designation Negro not simply to remain loyal to Du Bois’s termi-
nology but to emphasize the conceptual dimension of  this category in Du Bois’s
thought, one analogous to the place of  the “working class” in Marx or “power” in
Foucault, and to keep in view the historical contingency of racial designators. For
different formulations of Du Bois’s methodology concerning the systematic study
of  the Negro, see W. E. B. Du Bois, “The Study of  the Negro Problems,” Annals

Notes to Chapter One  143

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