Dreaming of the present : time, aesthetics, and the Black cooperative movement
(2022)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : The University of North Carolina Press, 2022
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781469667942 (electronic bk.) MWT14836348, 1469667940 (electronic bk.) 14836348
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

This is a story of art and movement building at the limits of imagination. In their darkest hours, W. E. B. Du Bois, Ella Baker, George Schuyler, and Fannie Lou Hamer gathered hundreds across the United States and beyond to build vast, but forgotten, networks of mutual aid: farms, shops, schools, banks, daycares, homes, health clinics, and burial grounds. They called these spaces "cooperatives," local challenges to global capital, where people pooled all they had to meet their needs. By reading their activism as an artistic practice, Irvin Hunt argues that their primary need was to free their movement from the logic of progress. From a remarkably diverse archive, Hunt extrapolates three new ways to describe the time of the movement: a continual beginning, a deliberate falling apart, and a simultaneity, a kind of all-at-once-ness. These temporalities reflect how a people maneuvered the law, reappropriated property, built autonomous communities, and fundamentally reimagined what a movement can be. Their movement was not the dream of a brighter day; it was the making of today out of the stuff of dreams. Hunt offers both an original account of Black mutual aid and, in a world of diminishing of futures, a moving meditation on the possibilities of the present

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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