Reviews

Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition by Cedric J. Robinson

frankied1's review against another edition

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4.0

I thought this was a challenging read! Super interesting and I think reading CLR James and Hobsbawm previously aided my understanding of it. I think it was a pretty Trotskyist book but was interesting in showing a wide range of thoughts and both the similarities and differences of thought within the Black Radical Tradition.

eaclapp41's review against another edition

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challenging informative inspiring reflective slow-paced

5.0

boritabletennis's review against another edition

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4.0

Definitely worth a revisit after some reading around in order to put its contents in context.

maryyyy's review against another edition

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challenging informative medium-paced

3.5

ktha's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective slow-paced

scallopwag's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective

5.0

 The third part has absolutely transformed my understanding, wow. I especially loved the final chapter, on Richard Wright. Reading this, everything clicked into place. 

janadiebeere's review against another edition

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2.75

(dropped the seminar and stopped reading for several months)
This felt a lot more like a history than a political theory text, but I still enjoyed most of it. Similarly to a lot of theory books i think it dragged on sometimes and repeated itself a lot but it wasn’t bad. I don’t really have any very strong feeling about this

seeceeread's review against another edition

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challenging informative inspiring reflective slow-paced
💭 "We are concerned with how real men and women (and children) experienced dislocation, poverty, and the exploitation of their labor and reacted to them; how they employed the intellectual and emotional inventories available to them to come to terms with their experience."

A post-doc level exploration of Black memes, with a nod to how they reflect rich cultural traditions that predate ___ [pick an app] by generations. Robinson nods to jazz, periodicals, organized labor and more, but chapter six is a standout for its enumeration of rebellions of the enslaved in Americas. 

A historical dragging: Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin were limited, baby - by their own experiences (like the rest of us!) Black radicals may have more freedom to observe without dogma and dream with abandon — because our tradition lacks 'sacred texts.' Because our tradition is often forged in the fiery depths of earnest engagement with Western institutions. Because our tradition leans back into the emergence of lived rebellion against the propagandized "Negro."

The author's diction, lengthy clause-cluttered sentences and assumptions of readers' prior knowledge (especially in the first three chapters) make this esoteric. Still, Robinson's tongue-in-cheek wit and key ideas come through intact, especially when he pares down to essentials: "Historically, slavery [in the Americas] was a critical foundation for capitalism." He's also skilled at citing otgers' pith: "There is no doubt that misfortune can bring about the brotherhood of the unfortunate. • Count of Arcos"

Robinson is often critical of historical simplifications. At times, he proffers bold new ideas to counter academic peers, such as his conception of a "gray" race of European laborers whose social status lies between the "ruling classes in dramatic, white relief" and workers of color.

I'm going to need to read again. But . . . after a while, when it's significantly simmered.

jortiz1's review against another edition

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5.0

One of the most incredible and compelling books I've read in the last couple of years. Can't recommend it enough.

megapolisomancy's review against another edition

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I admit defeat.