Blackness Visible: Essays on Philosophy and Race"This is an important collection. Its organizing theme is that by analyzing the metaphysics of race-creating we can understand the importance of political analyses of the racial state. This claim is vital not only for understanding of contemporary racial problems, but also for enriching our understanding of philosophical anthropology." Charles Mills makes visible in the world of mainstream philosophy some of the crucial issues of the black experience. Ralph Ellison's metaphor of black invisibility has special relevance to philosophy, whose demographic and conceptual "whiteness" has long been a source of wonder and complaint to racial minorities. Mills points out the absence of any philosophical narrative theorizing and detailing race's centrality to the recent history of the West, such as feminists have articulated for gender domination. European expansionism in its various forms, Mills contends, generates a social ontology of race that warrants philosophical attention. Through expropriation, settlement, slavery, and colonialism, race comes into existence as simultaneously real and unreal: ontological without being biological, metaphysical without being physical, existential without being essential, shaping one's being without being in one's shape. His essays explore the contrasting sums of a white and black modernity, examine standpoint epistemology and the metaphysics of racial identity, look at black-Jewish relations and racial conspiracy theories, map the workings of a white-supremacist polity and the contours of a racist moral consciousness, and analyze the presuppositions of Frederick Douglass's famous July 4 prognosis for black political inclusion. Collectively they demonstrate what exciting new philosophical terrain can be opened up once the color line in western philosophy is made visible and addressed. |
From inside the book
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... conceptual and theoretical philosophical horizons have been opened up , revealing realities that in a sense were always there but that were either not seen or not deemed xi worth mapping . The " maleness " of orthodox philosophy Preface,
... sense , that course led to the present book , of which this is , appropriately , the first chapter . The course forced me to think more systematically about the issue of philosophy and race than I had ever done before . Though my ...
... sense of the " schizophrenic relation- ship " they would be bound to have to works characterized by " a systematic denigration of the nature of women . " There is no mystery , then , about why women are likely to feel at least some ...
... sense that there is something strange in spending a whole course describing the logic of di- fferent moral ideals , for example , without ever mentioning that all of them were systematically violated for blacks . So it is not merely ...
... sense that they are , and not as a means to their ends . Moreover , because of the intellectual domination these ... sense but in the sense of challenging a social ontology ; not the consequent of a proof but the beginning of an ...
Contents
xi | |
21 | |
But What Are You Really? The Metaphysics of Race | 41 |
Blacks Jews and White Supremacy | 67 |
Theorizing White Supremacy | 97 |
The Racial Polity | 119 |
The Idea of a Herrenvolk Ethics | 139 |
Whose Fourth of July? Frederick Douglass | 167 |
Notes | 201 |
Index | 235 |