Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: “In the Dark”
- Part One Violence and the Unsightly
- 1 Figures of Violence: Valuation, Authorization, Expenditures of the African American, and Other Ways of Telling
- 2 Figuring Others of Value: Singing Voices, Signing Voices, and African American Culture
- 3 (Further) Figures of Violence: The Street in the U. S. Landscape
- Part Two Reasonings and Reasonablenesses
- Part Three Phonic and Scopic Economies
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - (Further) Figures of Violence: The Street in the U. S. Landscape
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: “In the Dark”
- Part One Violence and the Unsightly
- 1 Figures of Violence: Valuation, Authorization, Expenditures of the African American, and Other Ways of Telling
- 2 Figuring Others of Value: Singing Voices, Signing Voices, and African American Culture
- 3 (Further) Figures of Violence: The Street in the U. S. Landscape
- Part Two Reasonings and Reasonablenesses
- Part Three Phonic and Scopic Economies
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The enduring paradox of the concomitantly valueless and valuable status of African Americans in the dominant cultural imagination of the United States is well presented in the opening pages of The Wages of Whiteness by the historian David R. Roediger, who describes the efficacy and ubiquity of African American communities as present absences. Even as African Americans are taken as exemplary signs of the absence of a variety of human attributes and social proprieties (not to mention being enforced as physically absent from certain sociopolitical spheres), African American communities remain centrally present to and for the identity that dismisses them. The acknowledgment of such supplementarity is, of course, by now a commonplace of poststructuralist understanding – however, a commonplace inadequately pursued in relation to the dynamics of race (a matter taken up in Chapter V). Thus, what Roediger's statements manage to do is to render unmistakable the connections between economies of race and the academic commonplace of the deconstructive supplement. The second paragraph of The Wages of Whiteness reads as follows:
Even in an all-white town, race was never absent. I learned absolutely no lore of my German ancestry and no more than a few meaningless snatches of Irish songs, but missed little of racist folklore. Kids came to know the exigencies of chance by chanting “Eeny, meany, miney, mo / Catch a nigger by the toe” to decide teams and first batters in sport. […]
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Blackness and ValueSeeing Double, pp. 94 - 128Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998