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Fear of a Black planet: Climate apocalypse, Anthropocene futures and Black social thought

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

da Silva, FC 

Abstract

jats:pIn recent years, images of climate catastrophe have become commonplace. However, Black visions of the confluence of the Anthropocene and the apocalypse have been largely ignored. As we argue in this article, Black social thought offers crucial resources for drawing out the implicit exclusions of dominant representations of climate breakdown and developing an alternative account of the planet’s future. By reading a range of critical race theorists, from Frederick Douglass and W. E. B. Du Bois to Octavia Butler and Ta-Nehisi Coates, we propose a rethinking of the climate apocalypse. The African American theoretical and cultural tradition elaborates an image of the end of the world that emphasises the non-revelatory nature of climate catastrophe, warns against associating collapse with rebirth, and articulates a mode of maroon survivalism in which the apocalypse is an event to be endured and escaped rather than fatalistically expected or infinitely delayed.</jats:p>

Description

Peer reviewed: True

Keywords

Anthropocene, apocalypse, Blackness, marronage, plantation slavery

Journal Title

European Journal of Social Theory

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1368-4310
1461-7137

Volume Title

25

Publisher

SAGE Publications