Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Rowman & Littlefield International
Pages: 192
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-78348-398-3 • Hardback • August 2018 • $147.00 • (£113.00)
978-1-78348-399-0 • Paperback • February 2020 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
978-1-78348-400-3 • eBook • August 2018 • $37.95 • (£30.00)
Jean-Paul Rocchi is Professor of American Literature and Culture at University Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallée, France.
Acknowledgements / Foreword, Lewis R. Gordon / Introduction: The Desiring Black Subject as Reading Method / Chapter 1: The Other Bites the Dust—Towards an Epistemology of Identity / And Beyond (Addendum)—The Death of the Same Others & The Discipline of Jouissance / Chapter 2: The Making of a Man—A Modernist Etiology of American Masculinities:Trauma, Testimony, Resistance / Chapter 3: Dying Metaphors and Deadly Fantasies—Freud, Baldwin, and the Meta-psychoanalysis of Race / Chapter 4: Desire as “E mag e nation”—South African Black Consciousness and Post-Identity in Rozena Maart’s “No Rosa, No District Six” / Chapter 5: “The Substance of Things Hoped For”—Melvin Dixon’s VanishingRooms;or Racism Intimately / Chapter 6: Writing as I Lay Dying—AIDS Literature and the H(a)unting of Blackness / Chapter 7: The Word’s Image—Self-Portrait as a Conscious Lie Followed by:Motion, Perception and (Self-)Transformation—A Postdated Note / Selective Bibliography / Index
The Desiring Modes of Being Black is an archeology of desire and blackness. Rocchi pronounces a method of un-writing identity in texts only to interrogate its absences. The welcomed transdisciplinary approach exposes a critical, nuanced re-thinking of Baldwin, Dubois, race, sexuality, psychoanalysis, and others to advance a comprehensive frame to engage with performing blackness. Rocchi’s arguments are enhanced by his thoughtful and incisive writing, which makes the text desirable.
— Myron M. Beasley, Associate Professor of African American and American Cultural Studies, Bates College
Investigating the theoretical uses and limits of Freudian psychoanalysis, existentialism, phenomenology, deconstruction, and queer theory, Rocchi's Desiring Modes of Being Black disentangles the entrenched entanglements binding race, gender, sexuality, and nationality across vast postcolonial geographies. Framed by poignant Baldwinian self-meditations, Rocchi’s readings of James Baldwin, Melvin Dixon, the South African writer Rozena Maart, and 1990s North American AIDS memoirists, black and white, are methodologically experimental, analytically rigorous, and theoretically exciting. A rich collage of supreme intelligence, this book will conjure an attentive, engaged audience, whose premises about racial and sexual identities will be rattled and disrupted into thoughtful new directions.
— Marlon B. Ross, Professor of English, University of Virginia
The Desiring Modes of Being Black is a nearly impossible thing. At its heart a mapping of a precious space of struggle and inter-locution between Europe, Africa, and America, this book offers inspired readings of key texts and contexts, suggesting that even within the more progressive precincts of African Diaspora Studies we continue to remain trapped within intellectual and discursive silos that posit an artificial distinction between the works of Sigmund Freud and James Baldwin, the AIDS literature of African American men and the ideological complexities of the South African Black Consciousness Movement. In their place, Jean-Paul Rocchi introduces the desiring black subject whose longing opens new and radically innovative pathways to bold yet subtle critique.
— Robert F. Reid-Pharr, author of Archives of Flesh: African America, Spain, and Post-Humanist Critique