- Source: Black radical tradition
The Black radical tradition is a philosophical tradition and political ideology with roots in 20th century North America. It is a "collection of cultural, intellectual, action-oriented labor aimed at disrupting social, political, economic, and cultural norms originating in anti-colonial and antislavery efforts." It was first popularised by Cedric Robinson's book Black Marxism.
Influential concepts from the Black radical tradition include abolition, racial capitalism, and intersectionality. The Black radical tradition is closely related to anti-colonial, decolonial thought and Marxist third worldism.
Prominent figures and movements associated with the Black radical tradition include W. E. B. Du Bois, Malcolm X, the Black Panther Party, Angela Davis, the civil rights movement, Black feminism, Négritude, Afrocentrism, Black liberation theology, the Black Consciousness and Black Power movements; contemporary movements like Black Lives Matter have also been included in the tradition. A prominent Black Radical journal is Race & Class.
Thinkers
See also
21st-century communist theorists
Autonomism
Critical race theory
Combahee River Collective
Coloniality of power
Decoloniality
Neo-Marxism
New Communist movement
Post-Marxism
Postcolonialism
Prison abolition movement
Socialism of the 21st century
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Absolut (filsafat)
- Martin Luther King Jr.
- Anarkisme
- Daftar buku Penguin Classics
- Kekristenan
- Komunisme dewan
- Gender
- Eugene Genovese
- Hijab
- Sosialisme
- Black radical tradition
- Black Marxism
- Fred Moten
- Cedric Robinson
- The Dawn of Everything
- Racial capitalism
- Butch Ware
- Russell J. Rickford
- List of left-wing publications in the United Kingdom
- 21st-century communist theorists