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Being property once myself
Being property once myself




being property once myself

Being Property Once Myself is an incisive work of literary criticism and a groundbreaking articulation of undertheorized notions of dehumanization and the Anthropocene.Joshua Bennett, a professor of English and Creative Writing, award-winning poet, and scholar of African American literature, has won the Modern Language Association’s William Sanders Scarborough Prize for Being Property Once Myself: Blackness and the End of Man, his first book of literary criticism. And he turns to the Black radical tradition to challenge the pervasiveness of anti-Blackness in discourses surrounding the environment and animals. The plantation, the wilderness, the kitchenette overrun with pests, the valuation and sale of animals and enslaved people-all place Black and animal life in fraught proximity.īennett suggests that animals are deployed to assert a theory of Black sociality and to combat dominant claims about the limits of personhood.

being property once myself

Each chapter tracks a specific animal-the rat, the cock, the mule, the dog, the shark-in the works of Richard Wright, Toni Morrison, Zora Neale Hurston, Jesmyn Ward, and Robert Hayden. In Being Property Once Myself, prizewinning poet Joshua Bennett shows that Blackness has long acted as the caesura between human and nonhuman and delves into the literary imagination and ethical concerns that have emerged from this experience. “Tremendously illuminating…Bennett’s refreshing and field-defining approach shows how both classic and contemporary African American authors undo long-held assumptions of the animal–human divide.”-Salamishah Tillet, author of Sites of Slaveryįor much of American history, Black people have been conceived and legally defined as nonpersons, a subgenre of the human. “A gripping work…Bennett’s lyrical lilt in his sharp analyses makes for a thorough yet accessible read.”- LSE Review of Books

being property once myself

“An intense and illuminating reevaluation of black literature and Western thought.”-Ron Charles, Washington Post






Being property once myself