Black Patience: Performance, Civil Rights, and the Unfinished Project of Emancipation By Julius B. Fleming Jr. New York: New York University Press, 2022; pp. v + 301. $89 cloth, $29 paper, $29 e-book.
{"title":"Black Patience: Performance, Civil Rights, and the Unfinished Project of Emancipation By Julius B. Fleming Jr. New York: New York University Press, 2022; pp. v + 301. $89 cloth, $29 paper, $29 e-book.","authors":"J. Mahmoud","doi":"10.1017/s0040557422000357","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In the summer of 2022, residents of Jackson, Mississippi had been waiting more than a month to access clean water. Shocking (to some), this easily preventable infrastructural failure took place in Mississippi’s capital and most populous and majority-Black city. In Black Patience: Performance, Civil Rights, and the Unfinished Project of Emancipation, Julius B. Fleming Jr. theorizes the practice of making Black people wait for progress, full citizenship, and humanity. “This race-based structure of temporal violence,” he conceptualizes in the Introduction, “is black patience” (6). Rather than a virtue, Fleming etymologically excavates the Latin root of patience —“suffering,” a concept rarely theorized with attention to race (9–10)—to frame how from “slave ship” to “auction block” to “those who were inundated by calls to ‘go slow’ in the Civil Rights Movement, waiting has routinely been weaponized as a technology of anti-black violence and civic exclusion” (1). As the early 1960s temporally frame Black Patience, Fleming foregrounds Eisenhower’s 1950s presidency, during which millions of dollars were ushered to birth NASA while, concurrently, Eisenhower promoted waiting for racial progress; one 1958 newspaper headline read “Eisenhower Bids Negroes Be Patient about Rights” (7). Though Black Patience could exist primarily as an exacting work of political and critical theory, it instead flourishes in rich analyses of early 1960s Black theatrical practices that confront Black patience. Theatre artists, including Amiri Baraka, Duke Ellington, and Lorraine Hansberry, “used the theatrical stage to wrest black people from the violent enclosures of black patience” (38). Fleming also uncovers how civil rights activists engaged in dialogues with theatre’s epistemologies, such as Fannie Lou Hamer’s reaction to a 1964 production of Waiting for Godot in Ruleville, Mississippi: “You can’t sit around waiting” she told the audience at intermission (1). Thus, across Black Patience, Fleming deftly argues for what he coins Afro-presentism. This “radical structure of racial time” (26) was variously deployed","PeriodicalId":42777,"journal":{"name":"THEATRE SURVEY","volume":"64 1","pages":"91 - 93"},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"THEATRE SURVEY","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1017/s0040557422000357","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"THEATER","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
In the summer of 2022, residents of Jackson, Mississippi had been waiting more than a month to access clean water. Shocking (to some), this easily preventable infrastructural failure took place in Mississippi’s capital and most populous and majority-Black city. In Black Patience: Performance, Civil Rights, and the Unfinished Project of Emancipation, Julius B. Fleming Jr. theorizes the practice of making Black people wait for progress, full citizenship, and humanity. “This race-based structure of temporal violence,” he conceptualizes in the Introduction, “is black patience” (6). Rather than a virtue, Fleming etymologically excavates the Latin root of patience —“suffering,” a concept rarely theorized with attention to race (9–10)—to frame how from “slave ship” to “auction block” to “those who were inundated by calls to ‘go slow’ in the Civil Rights Movement, waiting has routinely been weaponized as a technology of anti-black violence and civic exclusion” (1). As the early 1960s temporally frame Black Patience, Fleming foregrounds Eisenhower’s 1950s presidency, during which millions of dollars were ushered to birth NASA while, concurrently, Eisenhower promoted waiting for racial progress; one 1958 newspaper headline read “Eisenhower Bids Negroes Be Patient about Rights” (7). Though Black Patience could exist primarily as an exacting work of political and critical theory, it instead flourishes in rich analyses of early 1960s Black theatrical practices that confront Black patience. Theatre artists, including Amiri Baraka, Duke Ellington, and Lorraine Hansberry, “used the theatrical stage to wrest black people from the violent enclosures of black patience” (38). Fleming also uncovers how civil rights activists engaged in dialogues with theatre’s epistemologies, such as Fannie Lou Hamer’s reaction to a 1964 production of Waiting for Godot in Ruleville, Mississippi: “You can’t sit around waiting” she told the audience at intermission (1). Thus, across Black Patience, Fleming deftly argues for what he coins Afro-presentism. This “radical structure of racial time” (26) was variously deployed
2022年夏天,密西西比州杰克逊的居民为了获得干净的水已经等了一个多月。令人震惊的是(对一些人来说),这种本可预防的基础设施故障发生在密西西比州首府、人口最多、黑人占多数的城市。在《黑人的耐心:表现、民权和未完成的解放计划》一书中,小朱利叶斯·b·弗莱明将让黑人等待进步、完全公民权和人性的做法理论化。“这种基于种族的暂时暴力结构,”他在引言中概念化说,“是黑人的耐心”(6)。弗莱明从词源上挖掘了耐心的拉丁词根——“痛苦”,而不是一种美德。从“奴隶船”到“拍卖区”,再到“那些在民权运动中被‘慢慢来’的呼声淹没的人,等待已经被当作一种反黑人暴力和公民排斥的技术而经常被武器化”(1)。正如20世纪60年代初暂时勾勒出黑人耐心一样,弗莱明展望了艾森豪威尔50年代的总统任期,在此期间,数百万美元诞生了美国宇航局,同时,艾森豪威尔提倡等待种族进步;1958年的一份报纸的标题是“艾森豪威尔要求黑人对权利要有耐心”(7)。虽然《黑人的耐心》主要可以作为一部严格的政治和批评理论作品而存在,但它却因对20世纪60年代早期黑人戏剧实践的丰富分析而蓬勃发展。戏剧艺术家,包括Amiri Baraka, Duke Ellington和Lorraine Hansberry,“利用戏剧舞台将黑人从黑人耐心的暴力包围中解放出来”(38)。弗莱明还揭示了民权活动家是如何与戏剧的认识论进行对话的,比如芬妮·卢·哈默(Fannie Lou Hamer)对1964年在密西西比州鲁勒维尔上演的《等待戈多》(Waiting for Godot)的反应:“你不能坐着等待,”她在中场休息时对观众说。因此,在《黑人耐心》一书中,弗莱明巧妙地论证了他所创造的非洲当下主义。这种“种族时间的激进结构”(26)得到了各种各样的运用