It passes for an unassailable truth that the slave past provides an explanatory prism for understanding the black political present. In None Like Us Stephen Best reappraises what he calls melancholy historicism -a kind of crime scene investigation in which the forensic imagination is directed toward the recovery of a we at the point of our violent origin. Best argues that there is and can be no we following from such a time and place, that black identity is constituted in and through negation, taking inspiration from David Walker's prayer that none like us may ever live again until time shall be no more. Best draws out the connections between a sense of impossible black sociality and strains of negativity that have operated under the sign of queer. In None Like Us the art of El Anatsui and Mark Bradford, the literature of Toni Morrison and Gwendolyn Brooks, even rumors in the archive, evidence an apocalyptic aesthetics, or self-eclipse, which opens the circuits between past and present and thus charts a queer future for black study.
Stephen Best is Associate Professor of English at the University of California, Berkeley, and author of The Fugitive's Properties: Law and the Poetics of Possession.
Title: None Like Us: Blackness, Belonging, Aesthetic Life (Theory Q)
Author: Best, Stephen
ISBN: 9781478001508
Binding:
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication Date: 2018-11-26
Number of Pages: 208
Weight: 0.3401 kg
None Like Us begins as an intervention into black studies. To accomplish this, it turns to works of art and invention by people whom history has needed to be black. But as it unravels any claim to genre, discipline, field, identity, or audience, the book issues a broad invitation to the reader to see black studies and queer theory, black and queer life, not as identities to inhabit, but as critical perspectives on history and on a present tense that has been so scarred by various melodramas of the self-of its defense, self-possession, and propriety-that have played themselves out on both sides of anti-racist critique. -- Kris Cohen * Public Books *
Compelling. . . Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty. -- C. E. Bender * Choice *
Best's ambitious and well-reasoned thesis confronts the challenge of thinking like a work of art but also of thinking the work of art as an object of critical studies, particularly in Black Studies. ... Responsibly argued and impressively confessional, Best o?ers thoughtful ways of recon?guring Black Studies. -- Alice Mikail Craven * Modern Language Review *
... None Like Us is distinctive as it aims to break with the well-established and perhaps taken-for-granted tenet in the black political present and contemporary black criticism, of a communitarian, shared slave past.... With its themes of identity and belonging, history and the archive, along with a range of visual and literary works, None Like Us would appeal to the interdisciplinary field of Black Studies sociologists; historians, anthropologists, in addition to scholars with an interest in art and visual culture. -- Karen Wilkes * Visual Studies *
None Like Us is attempting to produce a version of Blackness that does not need to work through the white gaze and, instead, understands freedom on its own terms. . . . Best prioritizes the present, the surface, and the pleasures of engaging on one's own terms. -- Amber Jamilla Musser * Cultural Critique *