Forms of Death: Necropolitics, Mourning, and Black Dignity

Q1 Medicine
Norman Ajari
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

To be Black means to have ancestors whose humanity has been de-nied by slavery, colonialism, neo-colonialism, and segregation, as well as by many theories elaborated in order to justify and intensify these modes of domination. To be Black also means having to face the enduring legacies of these systems and theories, which predomi-nantly manifest through overexposure to violence and death. Today, premature death and habituation to loss remain constitutive fea-tures of Black experience. Dignity, often de􀏔ined as the inherent value of every single human being, has been a core concept in ethics since Kant, at least. But in both philosophy and modern politics, the claim of respect for the dignity of people has coexisted with deep antiblack-ness. However, apart from the Western understanding of dignity stands another tradition. The concept of dignity is pervasive in Black radicalism, Caribbean philosophy, and African thought since the 18th century. This article draws inspiration from the legacy of these thinkers to elaborate an ethics centred on the speci􀏔icities of racial-ized life.
死亡形式:亡灵政治、哀悼和黑人尊严
作为黑人,意味着祖先的人性被奴隶制、殖民主义、新殖民主义和种族隔离,以及许多为证明和加强这些统治模式而阐述的理论所否定。作为黑人也意味着必须面对这些制度和理论的持久遗产,这些遗产主要表现在过度暴露于暴力和死亡中。今天,过早死亡和对失去的习惯仍然是黑人经历的基本特征。尊严,通常被认为是每个人的内在价值,至少自康德以来一直是伦理学的核心概念。但在哲学和现代政治中,对人的尊严的尊重与深刻的反黑人并存。然而,除了西方对尊严的理解之外,还有另一种传统。自18世纪以来,尊严的概念在黑人激进主义、加勒比哲学和非洲思想中无处不在。本文从这些思想家的遗产中汲取灵感,阐述了一种以特定的􀏔icities种族化生活为中心的伦理学。
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CiteScore
2.10
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