Still Hanging: Using Performance Texts to Deconstruct Racism
The current socio-political climate in the United States sheds a critical, glaring light on the racism and white supremacy which has been part of the fabric of this country since the seventeenth century. Barack Obama’s tenure as president resulted in a major increase in white hate groups, hate crimes, and unrelenting violence against innocent Black men and women by police. In response, people of different races, ethnicities, genders, sexual orientations, religions, ages and classes have taken to the streets in protest, and increased decades long efforts to organize against racism and for a more empathetic, just, democratic society. Social change about racism must begin with acknowledgement followed by open, focused, critical dialogue.

Still Hanging: Using Performance Texts to Deconstruct Racism, referencing both the resilience of Black people in the face of institutionalized racism and systemic oppression, and the fact that Black people continue to be literally and metaphorically lynched in 2020, is designed to use the power of lived experience specific performance texts as frames for engaging faculty, students and others interested in beginning to deconstruct racism and construct an anti-racist way of being.
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Still Hanging: Using Performance Texts to Deconstruct Racism
The current socio-political climate in the United States sheds a critical, glaring light on the racism and white supremacy which has been part of the fabric of this country since the seventeenth century. Barack Obama’s tenure as president resulted in a major increase in white hate groups, hate crimes, and unrelenting violence against innocent Black men and women by police. In response, people of different races, ethnicities, genders, sexual orientations, religions, ages and classes have taken to the streets in protest, and increased decades long efforts to organize against racism and for a more empathetic, just, democratic society. Social change about racism must begin with acknowledgement followed by open, focused, critical dialogue.

Still Hanging: Using Performance Texts to Deconstruct Racism, referencing both the resilience of Black people in the face of institutionalized racism and systemic oppression, and the fact that Black people continue to be literally and metaphorically lynched in 2020, is designed to use the power of lived experience specific performance texts as frames for engaging faculty, students and others interested in beginning to deconstruct racism and construct an anti-racist way of being.
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Still Hanging: Using Performance Texts to Deconstruct Racism

Still Hanging: Using Performance Texts to Deconstruct Racism

by Bryant Keith Alexander, Mary E. Weems
Still Hanging: Using Performance Texts to Deconstruct Racism

Still Hanging: Using Performance Texts to Deconstruct Racism

by Bryant Keith Alexander, Mary E. Weems

Hardcover

$150.00 
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Overview

The current socio-political climate in the United States sheds a critical, glaring light on the racism and white supremacy which has been part of the fabric of this country since the seventeenth century. Barack Obama’s tenure as president resulted in a major increase in white hate groups, hate crimes, and unrelenting violence against innocent Black men and women by police. In response, people of different races, ethnicities, genders, sexual orientations, religions, ages and classes have taken to the streets in protest, and increased decades long efforts to organize against racism and for a more empathetic, just, democratic society. Social change about racism must begin with acknowledgement followed by open, focused, critical dialogue.

Still Hanging: Using Performance Texts to Deconstruct Racism, referencing both the resilience of Black people in the face of institutionalized racism and systemic oppression, and the fact that Black people continue to be literally and metaphorically lynched in 2020, is designed to use the power of lived experience specific performance texts as frames for engaging faculty, students and others interested in beginning to deconstruct racism and construct an anti-racist way of being.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9789004464841
Publisher: Brill Academic Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 04/30/2021
Series: Personal/Public Scholarship Series , #11
Pages: 206
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.00(d)

About the Author

Bryant Keith Alexander, Ph.D. (1998), is Professor and Dean, College of Communication and Fine Arts, Loyola Marymount University. He is author of Performing Black Masculinity (Alta Mira, 2006), and The Performative Sustainability of Race (Peter Lang, 2012).

Mary E. Weems, M.A., Ph.D. (2001), is an Independent Scholar, imagination-intellect theorist, poet and author. Recent books include Blackeyed: Plays and Monologues (Sense, 2015) and Writings of Healing and Resistance: Empathy and the Imagination-Intellect (Peter Lang, 2013).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Message about Cover Art
List of Figures
About the Authors

Introduction


1 Still Hanging/On: ‘Strange Fruit’ and ‘Glory’ — Songs of/as/in Protest: Or, from Stage to Page: Documenting Ideological Performance
 Bryant Keith Alexander

Interlude 1: On Blackouts and Black Notes
 Bryant Keith Alexander

2 Black Notes
 Mary E. Weems

Interlude 2: Confluences of Pain
 Bryant Keith Alexander

3 Let the People See What They Did to My Child
 Mary E. Weems

4 George Floyd’s Mama
 Mary E. Weems

5 Wendy’s, Me, and Rayshard Brooks: Another Black Man Killed (June 12, 2020)
 Bryant Keith Alexander

6 Where’s the Beef?
 Mary E. Weems

Interlude 3: A Moment of Prayer
 Bryant Keith Alexander

7 Three Meditations on Prayer and Particularity: Or: On Black Mothers, Social Justice, and Queering Catholicism
 Bryant Keith Alexander

Interlude 4: Courageous Conversations
 Bryant Keith Alexander

8 Three Conversations
 Mary E. Weems

Interlude 5: Trigger Warnings
 Bryant Keith Alexander

Interlude 6: Bamboozled
 Mary E. Weems

9 Eat Fresh
 Mary E. Weems

10 Not a Fan Letter: Or, Trigger Warning: An Autoethnographic Rant on Jussie Smollett
 Bryant Keith Alexander

Interlude 7: Hanging Chads?
 Bryant Keith Alexander


11 Attached?
 Mary E. Weems

12 Still Hanging?
 Bryant Keith Alexander

Interlude 8: A Crack in My Heart
 Bryant Keith Alexander

13 Crack the Door for Some Air
 Mary E. Weems


14 Is There a White Double Consciousness? A Short Dialogue
 Mary E. Weems and Bryant Keith Alexander

Study Questions, Prompts, and Probes
 Bryant Keith Alexander

Notes for Teachers, Faculty, and Facilitators on Establishing a Learning Community
 Mary E. Weems

Bibliography and Further Reading
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