| ... |
... |
@@ -1,0
+1,15 @@ |
|
1 |
+Black bodies are systematically condemned to gratuitous violence; politics of hope coax oppressed into waiting for a ‘better tomorrow,’ allowing systems of domination to continue. Warren 1 |
|
2 |
+Warren, Calvin L. "Black Nihilism and the Politics of Hope." CR: The New Centennial Review 15.1 (2015): 215-48. Web. |
|
3 |
+We continue to... of political fantasy. |
|
4 |
+ |
|
5 |
+The impact framing is resentment: the blaming of one’s self which leads to the blaming of everything else. Ressentiment is necessitated by the way society is structured since the Middle Passage created a negative conception of un-freedom tied to blackness which allowed for whiteness to thrive. Warren 2 |
|
6 |
+Warren, Calvin L. "Black Nihilism and the Politics of Hope." CR: The New Centennial Review 15.1 (2015): 215-48. Web. |
|
7 |
+Following Nietzsche and... within humanist grammars. |
|
8 |
+ |
|
9 |
+The alternative is political apostasy: an act of self-excommunication as a tool of empowerment when everything else has failed you. Warren 3 |
|
10 |
+Warren, Calvin L. "Black Nihilism and the Politics of Hope." CR: The New Centennial Review 15.1 (2015): 215-48. Web. |
|
11 |
+The black nihilist... and spiritual practice. |
|
12 |
+ |
|
13 |
+The role of the ballot is to endorse the best method for black-empowerment. Communal norms institute racist practices and make disadvantaged voices unheard. Academic debate must change now. Smith |
|
14 |
+Smith, Elijah, “A Conversation in Ruins: Race and Black Participation in Lincoln Douglas Debate.” 2013. |
|
15 |
+It will be... students cannot escape. |