Is there a way of being human that could invite people away from today’s models of violence and consumerism? Looking forward to a new, increasingly creolized century, in 1997 the Martinican poet and philosopher Édouard Glissant asked, ‘Do we have the right and the means to live another dimension of humanity? But how?’Building on the defense of human rights he outlined in Choose Your Bearing, Benjamin P. Davis traces figures of 'the human' and ‘humanity' in W. E. B. Du Bois, Édouard Glissant, Sylvia Wynter and Edward Said. He concludes with a reflection on Hannah Arendt’s post-war correspondence with Karl Jaspers, which offers lessons for a new humanism as we witness ongoing wars today.
Benjamin P. Davis is an Assistant Professor of Africana Studies and Hispanic Studies at Texas A&M University. He is the author of Simone Weil’s Political Philosophy as well as Choose Your Bearing: Édouard Glissant, Human Rights, and Decolonial Ethics, also by Edinburgh University Press.
PrefaceIntroduction: Thinking Race and Humanity Together (An Attempt)Critiques of ‘The Human’Defenses of ‘The Human’Conceptual Sufficiency and Stuart Hall’s Politics without GuaranteesChapter OutlinePart I: Detour through Theory1. W. E. B. Du Bois’s Anti-War HumanismDu Bois’s Use of ‘Humanity’ in Black Reconstruction and John BrownDu Bois’s Use of Human Rights in the 1940sNotes toward a Du Boisian Politics2. Édouard Glissant’s Relational Humanism The Importance of Poetry‘The Human’ across Glissant’s Theoretical WorkReturning to the AncestorsPart II: Risking the Personal3. Sylvia Wynter’s Ceremonial Humanism‘The Human’ in WynterSecular CriticismNatural Law and HumanismReturning to Ceremony4. Edward Said’s Post-colonial HumanismRepresentationsStylePositionalityCoda5. Hannah Arendt’s Ordinary HumanismCaught in CategoriesContradictionsGiving an AccountAn Ethics of CorrespondenceBibliographyIndex
This provocative book suggests that the tide has turned against sophistry and fatalism. Benjamin Davis has joyfully demonstrated that they are not the most sophisticated kinds of 'theory' after all.