imagining political culture beyond the color line /
Paul Gilroy.
Cambridge, Mass. :
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press,
2000.
406 p. ;
24 cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Racial observance, nationalism, and humanism -- The crisis of "race" and raciology -- Modernity and infrahumanity -- Identity, belonging, and the critique of pure sameness -- Fascism, embodiment, and revolutionary conservatism -- Hitler wore khakis : icons, propaganda, and aesthetic politics -- "After the love has gone" : biopolitics and the decay of the Black public sphere -- The tyrannies of unanimism -- Black to the future -- "All about the Benjamins" : multicultural Blackness--corporate, commercial, and oppositional -- "Race," cosmopolitanism, and catastrophe -- "Third stone from the Sun" : planetary humanism and strategic universalism.
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"Paul Gilroy contends that race-thinking has distorted the finest promises of modern democracy. He compels us to see that fascism was the principal political innovation of the twentieth century - and that its power to seduce did not die in a bunker in Berlin. Aren't we in fact using the same devices that Nazis used in their movies and advertisements when we make spectacles of our identities and differences? Gilroy examines the ways in which media and commodity culture have become preeminent in our lives in the years since the 1960s and especially in the 1980s with the rise of hip-hop and other militancies. With this trend, he contends, much that was wonderful about black culture has been sacrificed in the service of corporate interests and new forms of cultural expression tied to visual technologies. He argues that the triumph of the image spells death to politics and reduces people to mere symbols"--BOOK JACKET.