Sexual Violence and Racial Capitalism: James Baldwin's Prisons, 1969-74

被引:0
作者
Dango, Michael [1 ]
机构
[1] Beloit Coll, Beloit, WI 53511 USA
来源
PMLA-PUBLICATIONS OF THE MODERN LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA | 2024年 / 139卷 / 02期
关键词
D O I
10.1632/S0030812924000233
中图分类号
I [文学];
学科分类号
05 ;
摘要
This essay engages with James Baldwin's work on prison rape in the early 1970s: his directing of John Herbert's play Fortune and Men's Eyes while in Turkey (1969-70), his nonfiction book No Name in the Street (1972), and his penultimate novel, If Beale Street Could Talk (1974). Over the course of these works, Baldwin theorized that sexual violence constitutes racial capitalism by mediating between the two state-organized institutions tasked with securing the primitive accumulation and surplus value on which racial capitalism relies: the family (and, more broadly, heterosexuality) and the prison (and, more broadly, policing). In turn, Baldwin helps converge two intellectual traditions that developed after him, the black radical and Marxist feminist traditions, in order to explain how sexual violence expropriates both forced productive labor and unpaid reproductive labor through its production of racialized gender and kinlessness.
引用
收藏
页码:252 / 266
页数:15
相关论文
共 61 条
[1]  
Baldwin James., 1995, Going to Meet the Man, P227
[2]  
Baldwin James., 2006, BEALE STREET COULD T
[3]  
Baldwin James., 1998, No Name in the Street. Collected Essays, P349
[4]  
Berlant Lauren., 2011, Cruel Optimism
[5]  
Birmingham K, 2011, James Baldwin: America and Beyond, P141
[6]   THE JOHNSON LETTER REVISITED [J].
BOLUKBASI, S .
MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES, 1993, 29 (03) :505-525
[7]  
Briggs Laura., 2003, Reproducing Empire: Race, Sex, Science
[8]  
Clark Keith., 2004, BLACK MANHOOD JAMES
[9]  
Cleaver Eldridge., 1967, SOUL ICE
[10]  
Davis Angela., 1972, MASS REV, V13, P81