废奴主义未来的非洲女性主义:投机地理中的档案萦绕

Q4 Arts and Humanities
S. M. Rodriguez
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引用次数: 0

摘要

非洲裔女性所表现出的相互依存的集体能动性揭示了让黑人的生命变得重要的可能性,即使在尸体主义和殖民主义的死亡世界结构中也是如此。本文以黑人政治女性为中心,将刑罚废奴主义理论从白人中解放出来。我认为,反帝国和反资本主义斗争的遗产导致了殖民地散居者的档案挥之不去。在方法论上,这篇文章交叉阅读了三种关于无国界抵抗的叙事,将克劳迪娅·琼斯、La Mulâtresse Solitude和Stella Nyanzi视为在监禁前、监禁期间和监禁后进行斗争和集体化的人物。为了对抗时间的殖民性,本文将自己从基于时代或“时态”的语言中解放出来。由于殖民主义对三人来说仍然存在,我努力将他们在当下的斗争联系起来,并利用黑人、非洲和反殖民的女权主义文学来构建他们的抵抗。最终,通过集中这些故事,文章将今天的废除死刑定位为非洲直接行动、反资本主义批判和监狱和殖民地重新人性化的实践。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
African feminisms for abolitionist futures: archival hauntings in a speculative geography
abstract The interdependent, collective agency shown by women of African descent reveals the possibility of making Black lives matter, even in the death-worlding structures of carceralism and coloniality. This article emancipates penal abolitionist theorising from whiteness by centring Black political womanhood. I argue that the legacy of anti-imperial and anti-capitalist struggle contributes to an archival haunting of the colonial carceral diaspora. Methodologically, this article cross-reads three narratives of borderless resistance, considering Claudia Jones, La Mulâtresse Solitude, and Stella Nyanzi as figures who fight and collectivise before, during and after incarceration. To counter the coloniality of time, this article unmoors itself from period-based or ‘tensed’ language. As coloniality remains present for the three, I endeavour to connect their struggles in and for the present and frame their resistance using Black, African, and anticarceral feminist literature. Ultimately, by centring these stories, the article positions today’s abolition as emergent from an African praxis of direct action, anti-capitalist critique and rehumanisation in prisons and colonies.
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AGENDA
AGENDA POETRY-
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