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  1.  20
    ‘I Can't Breathe’: The Suffocating Nature of Racism.Gabriel O. Apata - 2020 - Theory, Culture and Society 37 (7-8):241-254.
    The death of George Floyd in May 2020 sparked an unprecedented global wave of protests that appeared to mark a turning point in the battle against racial injustice. But protests against racism are not new; each comes and soon passes into the archives of history, leaving few lasting changes in its wake. What was different about the death of Floyd was that the graphic manner of its unfolding was captured on film: the slow act of wilful suffocation, and how the (...)
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  2.  8
    Adorno on Philosophy and Sociology.Gabriel O. Apata - 2022 - Theory, Culture and Society 39 (7-8):331-343.
    Philosophy and sociology appear to belong to separate spheres of thought, which might explain why they exist as separate academic disciplines. But in what way, if any, are philosophy and sociology different from, or related to, each other? In these series of lectures delivered at Frankfurt University in 1960, Adorno examines the relationship between philosophy and sociology and concludes that the subjects do not belong to separate spheres of thought. But Adorno has a bigger aim in mind. His attempt to (...)
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    A Requiem for Mr Wilson: Comments on David Goldberg’s Conversation with Achille Mbembe.Gabriel O. Apata - 2018 - Theory, Culture and Society 35 (7-8):237-242.
    Achille Mbembe’s book Critique of Black Reason has attracted scholarly interest and commentaries. In a conversation that took place between David Theo Goldberg and Mbembe, both men discuss some of the themes that are raised in the book. This paper examines that conversation and focuses on the idea of the archive and how the dehumanisation, damage, destruction and death that racism has visited on many black people can be resurrected, dusted down and repaired. I have used Mbembe’s idea of blackness (...)
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  4.  38
    Review: Achille Mbembe, trans. Lauren Dubois, Critique of Black Reason. [REVIEW]Gabriel O. Apata - 2017 - Theory, Culture and Society 34 (7-8):283-291.
    Let us begin by posing a series of questions. Can there ever be such a thing as black reason, and if so what would that entail? If there can be such a thing as black reason, could such an idea ever be objective? What kind of properties or experiences may constitute black reason that only black people share? But if black reason exists, does this not essentialize blackness, thus running the risk of undermining the entire social constructionist project that there (...)
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