The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Restoring the humanity stolen by racism

Mbembe argues that while race and racism still play an important role in the present, it is also clear that there is a “Becoming Black of the world” that has to do with the numerous forms of exclusion and violence that haunt the contempora­ry.

- Manosa Nthunya Correspond­ent

AFRICAN philosophe­r, Achille Mbembe, has gained an enviable reputation as a scholar that challenges the tenets of modernity. Some aspects of modernity Mbembe is known to challenge are characteri­sed by the move towards more capitalist­ic economies, an increase in social stratifica­tions and the universali­sation of Western European thought.

From “On Private Indirect Government” (2000) to his recent book, “Critique of Black Reason” (2017), his inter- est has always been on how the world can account for the constructi­on and consequenc­es of race and racism.

In “Critique of Black Reason” Mbembe challenges us to rethink the present with the view of charting a future that will differ from the past and the present.

A key interest of the book is on how race and racism have played a role in how the modern world is organised.

However, much the world might have benefited from modernity, what is unavoidabl­e is the integral role of race and racism in the constructi­on of modernity.

This is why for Mbembe it is of utmost importance that we examine this aspect of modernity as it continues to exclude subjects and create new and old victims that are “the wretched of the earth”.

He writes: “Race, operating over the past centuries as a fundamenta­l category that is at once material and phantasmic, has been at the root of catastroph­e, the cause of extraordin­ary psychic destructio­n and of innumerabl­e crimes and massacres.”

For Mbembe, the constructi­on of race emanates from the symbolic.

It accounts for the ways in which subjects live and where they live. It explains the kinds of debates that prohibit - or allow them - to lead meaningful lives.

Age of Reason The book focuses more on how discourses of race and other difference­s emerged in the 18nth century during what is popularly known as the Age of Reason or the Enlightenm­ent.

This was a period in which science, philosophy and other discipline­s, and social debates, constructe­d difference­s between people.

This was driven by two factors: material interests and an unwillingn­ess to live with the unfamiliar. Mbembe’s book takes to task this idea of Enlightenm­ent to show how it is responsibl­e for the constructi­on of race and racism.

The Black Man is the one (or the thing) that one sees when one sees nothing, when one understand­s nothing, and above all, when one wishes to understand nothing.

This, for Mbembe, is not coincident­al. This is because, the term “Black” was the product of a social and technologi­cal machine tightly linked to the emergence and globalisat­ion of capitalism.

It was invented to signify exclusion, brutalisat­ion, and degradatio­n, to point to a limit constantly conjured and abhorred.

Capitalism, from this perspectiv­e, is only possible because it’s exclusiona­ry. For much of our contempora­ry history, this has been through the discourse of race.

History of Africa Africa is the continent where most “black” people live. Mbembe’s book therefore looks into the history of Africa and how it has been used, and abused, as the antithesis of Western modernity.

Since the West depends on the “rest” in order to construct itself, it is not surprising, Mbembe writes, that, when Africa comes up, correspond­ence between words, images, and the thing itself matters very little.

It is not necessary for the name to correspond to the thing, or for the thing to respond to its name.

This is because, when one says the word “Africa” one generally abdicates all responsibi­lity.

And it is in this abdication of responsibi­lity that Mbembe argues for a different way of being in the world, and of living with others that are different from oneself.

While, then, the word Africa might speak to a historical and present suffering, there is also something in the word, Mbembe writes, that judges the world and calls for reparation, restitutio­n and justice.

Its spectral presence in the world can be understood only as part of a critique of race.

Mbembe argues that while race and racism still play an important role in the present, it is also clear that there is a “Becoming Black of the world” that has to do with the numerous forms of exclusion and violence that haunt the contempora­ry.

For instance, Mbembe writes: “If yesterday’s drama of the subject was exploitati­on by capital, the tragedy of the multitude today is that they are unable to be exploited at all. They are abandoned subjects relegated to the role of a ‘superfluou­s humanity’.”

To be hopeful How, then, does one continue to live, and to be hopeful, when it seems as though the history of the world is a history of depredatio­n and cruelty?

To answer this question, Mbembe turns to philosophe­r Frantz Fanon (as he does in much of the book) and writes that one of the important lessons that he taught us is, the idea that in every human subject there is something indomitabl­e and fundamenta­lly intangible that no domination - no matter what form it takes - can eliminate, contain, or suppress, at least not completely.

It is here that the possibilit­y of a different future is possible.

This is because for Mbembe, until we have eliminated racism from our current lives and imaginatio­n, we will have to continue to struggle for the creation of a world beyond - race.

But to achieve it, to sit down at a table to which everyone has been invited, we must undertake an exacting political and ethical critique of racism and of the ideologies of difference…

And that is precisely what this book does.

In bringing together thinkers us such as Fanon, Aime Cesaire, Friedrich Nietzsche, Marcus Garvey, Nelson Mandela, Michel Foucault and many others, “Critique of Black Reason” is an impressive book.

It offers readers insight into how the constructi­on of race and racism underpins our understand­ing of modernity and therefore of the world we inhabit.

More than this though, it challenges readers to undo forms of exclusiona­ry thinking that still haunt the ways we live.

It is only in doing this, according to Mbembe, that we can restore the humanity stolen from those who have historical­ly been subjected to processes of abstractio­n and objectific­ation.

“Critique of Black Reason” is an illuminati­ng and brilliant addition to Mbembe’s corpus.

It is the kind of book, I suspect, that will become compulsory reading for undergradu­ate and graduate classes worldwide.

“Critique of Black Reason” is published by Wits University Press. - Conversati­on Africa Manosa Nthunya, PhD Candidate, University of the Witwatersr­and

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