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9781478033264 Academic Inspection Copy

Breaking the World

Black Insecurity and the Horizons of Speculation
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In Breaking the World, Justin L. Mann argues that Black speculative fictions are an essential but overlooked archive for understanding the modern security ambitions of the United States. Foregrounding how the contemporary security state renders Black life insecure, Mann theorizes worldbreaking: speculative narrative, aesthetic, and ethical strategies that Black writers, musicians, and artists employ to unmake the processes by which state and parastate agents augment and build up the tools, techniques, and infrastructures intended to make people safer. He shows how the techniques of worldbreaking in the works of Octavia E. Butler, Colson Whitehead, N.K. Jemisin, Janelle Monae, and the Marvel and DC Cinematic Universes chart the distinction between securitization and Black insecurity. These works illuminate the difference between the antiblackness of state security and the power of Black collectivity. Contending that speculative worldbreaking is a vital part of the Black radical imagination, Mann shows that its destructive strategies can help transform worlds of securitization to worlds of liberation.
Justin L. Mann is Assistant Professor of English and Black Studies at Northwestern University.
Acknowledgments ix Introduction. Getting Lost in the Dark 1 1. Assuring Survival 23 2. How's Your Security? 53 3. Hazardous Bodies 81 4. Secret Wars 115 5. Racial Tectonics 151 Conclusion: The Stars Are Closer 181 Notes 193 Bibliography 213 Index
"Mann brilliantly illuminates worldbreaking as a Black feminist practice of refusal. Reading across speculative fiction, comics, film and critical theory, Mann illuminates how Black science fiction breaks the world that is breaking us. A major intervention in Black feminist literary studies that gives us a strikingly rich history of the present, Breaking the World redefines the stakes of speculation and critique."--Erica R. Edwards, author of, The Other Side of Terror: Black Women and the Culture of US Empire
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