Using the concept of “critical blackness” to signal a deconstructive sensibility, Brooks shows how a set of artists defy conventions and preconceptions about how to see blackness, and how to think of artistic genres and aesthetic traditions about black literature and race more generally. Brooks makes us “hear” photography and see how a novel can “sound” like bebop to show how the strategic illegibility produced by critical blackness is not only conceptual but also sensorial. The Racial Unfamiliar prompts us to explore how the senses might be re-educated to reject racial normative ways of perceiving blackness.