ABSTRACT

Based on the premise that the project of Western Modernity is a structuring element of our societies, Racism and Racial Surveillance explores in detail its legacies of coloniality and racialization that interfere in a subtle and perverse way in the current social, cultural and political systems.

Guided by an interdisciplinary methodology, the various contributions privilege historical contexts of colonial formation and offer a thorough and intersectional analysis on the specters of coloniality in the upsurge of racism, surveillance, and criminalization, as well as the presence of the phantom of the race in spaces of knowledge production such as that of artistic field, forensic genetics and criminal identification.

Drawing on multi case studies the book then proffers key concepts and historical background that will be of interest to researchers, students and professionals in a broad range of areas of social sciences and humanities research, including fields such as criminology and policing, science and technology studies, arts studies, literary studies, race and ethnic studies and, finally, memory studies.

Chapters 8, 9 and 10 of this book is available for free in PDF format as Open Access from the individual product page at www.routledge.com. It has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.

part 11|149 pages

chapter Chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|25 pages

Empire and literature

From the schism of race to the seism of the “other”

chapter Chapter 3|31 pages

Breaking the complicity between the aesthetic device and the colonial device

Afro-Brazilian art, Afro-descendant Black art

chapter Chapter 5|17 pages

Cape Verde, Brazil and Portugal

Dubious Atlantic triangulations

chapter Chapter 7|18 pages

Insidious invisibilities

World literature, “race” and resistance

part 1512|72 pages

chapter Chapter 9|26 pages

Politics of (non)belonging

Enacting imaginaries of affected publics through forensic genetic technologies