Sartre on Contingency
Antiblack Racism and Embodiment- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2021
Summary
The problem of antiblack racism has a long history in the world, with as long a history of thinkers writing and theorizing against it. Few philosophers have opposed institutionalized racialism as vehemently as Jean-Paul Sartre, both in his intellectual work and in his political action.
This book argues that not only does a relationship exists between Sartre’s existentialist philosophy and antiracism but also, more profoundly, that it is precisely his existential ontology that informs his anti-racist social and political commitments. He sought to examine the complexity of our existence as conscious bodies and thus provides the ontological basis for understanding the situation of a black person in an antiblack world.
This book is about how Sartre’s philosophy – especially his early writings – can be applied to address the problem of racism against black people. It argues that among the many concepts in Sartre’s work that are useful in understanding the problem of racism against black people, the philosophical notion of contingency is one of the most significant. Contingency in Sartre is the view that whatever exists, need not exist, and that therefore it can be changed; that the fact that one is born white or black without their choice, has no moral weight at all in treating others as though they are responsible for what they are. In this book Mabogo More contends that through Sartre’s philosophical notion of contingency, he provides us with the ammunition to understand and deal with racism broadly, and antiblack racism in particular.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2021
- ISBN-Print
- 978-1-5381-5703-9
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-5381-5705-3
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 304
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- Foreword No access
- References No access
- Acknowledgments No access
- Sartre Now No access
- Racism Today No access
- Western Philosophers and Antiblack Racism No access
- Sartre’s Existentialism No access
- Antiblack Racism No access
- Black People as Problem No access
- Denial of Black Humanity No access
- Exclusion from the Ethical No access
- Justification of Violence against Blacks No access
- Sartre and Racism No access
- Sartre’s Ontology No access
- Being-in-Itself and Being-for-Itself No access
- Human Nature (Essence) No access
- Facticity No access
- Bad Faith No access
- The Look (Gaze) No access
- Contingency in Traditional Philosophy No access
- Contingency in Sartre’s Philosophy No access
- The Body and Contingency No access
- Contingency and Racism No access
- Strategies to Overcome Contingency No access
- The Black Person as the Other No access
- Naturalistic Argument No access
- Psychological Argument No access
- Religious Argument No access
- Immanent and Transcendental Strategies No access
- Contingency in Concrete Situations No access
- Anti-Semitism No access
- Responses to Anti-Semitism No access
- Blacks in America No access
- Blacks in Africa—Negritude No access
- Ontological Solution No access
- The Radical Conversion No access
- Freedom: The Absolute Value No access
- Contingency and Morality No access
- Sartre’s Political Solution No access
- Socialism No access
- Revolutionary Violence No access
- Critique of Sartre No access
- Solidarity No access
- Sartre on Solidarity No access
- Seriality No access
- Fused (Active) Group No access
- Solidarity Contra Appiah No access
- Frantz Fanon No access
- Chabani N. Manganyi No access
- The Phenomenology of the Black Body No access
- Transcending Racism No access
- Lewis R. Gordon No access
- Bad Faith and the Contingency of the Body No access
- Sartre’s Legacy No access
- Introduction No access
- Chapter 1 No access
- Chapter 2 No access
- Chapter 3 No access
- Chapter 4 No access
- Chapter 5 No access
- Chapter 6 No access
- Chapter 7 No access
- Chapter 8 No access
- Chapter 9 No access
- References No access Pages 279 - 288
- Index No access Pages 289 - 302
- About the Author No access Pages 303 - 304





