Black Bodies in America as the Metaphors for Oppression, Poverty, Violence, and Hate: Searching for Sustainable Solutions Beyond the Black-letter Law

IF 0.7 4区 社会学 Q3 ETHNIC STUDIES
W. Iheme
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Black people in America have often been labeled outlaws, deviants, and nonconformists who are disinterested in complying with the laid down rules. However, from a long range experience dating back to slavery, they recognize that rules in the American context whether the Slave Codes, Black Codes, Jim Crows, or the contemporary law, are machinations of the legal system to perpetuate oppression and violence against Blackness. Toward self-preservation, they have learned to radically resist acts of oppression such as wrongful arrests by the police and the functional denial of their rights to be presumed innocent, protest and bear arms, even if such resistance necessitates a stark disobedience to the law enforcement. The Stono Rebellion of 1739 and other slave uprisings used resistance to achieve the abolition of chattel slavery. In the contemporary times, the Black radical tradition pursues the eradication of criminal enslavement by promoting Black protests and resistance against wrongful arrests: wrongful arrests have been identified as the preliminary steps toward mass Black incarceration. In opposition to the mainstream perspective in American literature, this paper uses a functional-analytical approach to legal reasoning to analyze key legal, historical, and sociological issues surrounding the existence of Black people in America in order to show that slavery is still functionally alive: it argues positively for the legitimacy and appropriateness of the Black radical tradition as a reliable means of effectuating the myriad black-letter rights that started in 1865 under the Thirteenth Amendment.
美国黑人身体作为压迫、贫困、暴力和仇恨的隐喻:寻求超越黑人法律的可持续解决方案
美国的黑人经常被贴上非法分子、离经叛道者和不墨守成规者的标签,他们对遵守既定规则毫无兴趣。然而,从可以追溯到奴隶制的长期经验来看,他们认识到,无论是《奴隶法典》、《黑人法典》、吉姆·克劳还是当代法律,美国背景下的规则都是法律体系的阴谋,目的是使针对黑人的压迫和暴力永久化。为了自我保护,他们学会了从根本上抵制压迫行为,如警察的错误逮捕和剥夺他们被推定为无辜、抗议和携带武器的权利,即使这种抵抗需要完全不服从执法。1739年的斯托诺起义和其他奴隶起义利用抵抗来废除动产奴隶制。在当代,黑人激进传统通过促进黑人抗议和抵制非法逮捕来根除犯罪奴役:非法逮捕已被确定为大规模监禁黑人的初步步骤。与美国文学的主流视角相反,本文采用功能分析法对法律推理进行了分析,以及围绕美国黑人存在的社会学问题,以表明奴隶制在功能上仍然存在:它积极支持黑人激进传统的合法性和适当性,认为这是实现1865年根据第十三修正案开始的无数黑人字母权利的可靠手段。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: For the last quarter of a century, the Journal of Black Studies has been the leading source for dynamic, innovative, and creative approach on the Black experience. Poised to remain at the forefront of the recent explosive growth in quality scholarship in the field of Black studies, the Journal of Black Studies is now published six times per year. This means a greater number of important and intellectually provocative articles exploring key issues facing African Americans and Blacks can now be given voice. The scholarship inside JBS covers a wide range of subject areas, including: society, social issues, Afrocentricity, economics, culture, media, literature, language, heritage, and biology.
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