Sense of Things
Abstract
<jats:p> An inquiry into onto-epistemology, this essay investigates the reciprocal production of aesthesis and empiricism, both the seemingly scientific and the perceptual knowledge that signifies otherwise under conditions of imperial Western humanism. In a reading of Nalo Hopkinson’s Brown Girl in the Ring (1998), I argue that as an enabling condition of imperial Western humanism, the black mater(nal) is foreclosed by the dialectics of hegemonic common sense and that the anxieties stimulated by related signifiers, such as the black(ened) maternal image, voice, and lifeworld, allude to the latent symbolic-material capacities of the black mater(nal), as mater, as matter, to destabilize or even rupture the reigning order of representation that grounds the thought-world relation. In other words, the specter of the black mater(nal)—that is, nonrepresentability—haunts the terms and operations tasked with adjudicating the thought-world correlate or the proper perception of “the world” such as hierarchical distinctions between reality and illusion, Reason and its absence, subject and object, science and fiction, and speculation and realism, which turn on attendant aporias pertaining to immanence and transcendence. Exploring the mind-body-social nexus in Hopkinson’s fiction, I contend that in Brown Girl vertigo is evoked as both a symptom and a metaphor of inhabiting a reality discredited (a blackened reality) that is at once the experience of the carceral and the apprehension of a radically redistributed sensorium. I argue the black mater(nal) holds the potential to transform the terms of reality and feeling, therefore rewriting the conditions of possibility of the empirical.</jats:p>
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Jackson, Zakiyyah (n.d.). Sense of Things. Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience, 2(2). pp. 1–48. 10.28968/cftt.v2i2.28801 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31625.
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Zakiyyah Iman Jackson
Zakiyyah Iman Jackson is Associate Professor of Theory in the Literature Program at Duke University.
Contemporary and Experimental African Diasporic Literature, Art, and Film; History and Philosophy of Science, Medicine, Computational Technologies and Digital Media; Continental Philosophy; Contemporary Critical Theories; Aesthetics; Gender and Sexuality Studies; Disability Studies; Ecologies of Race
Professor Jackson is the author of Becoming Human: Matter and Meaning in an Antiblack World: winner of the Harry Levin First Book Prize from the American Comparative Literature Association, the Gloria Anzaldúa Book Award from the National Women’s Studies Association, and the Lambda Literary Book Award for LGBTQ Studies. Jackson's research investigates the engagement of African diasporic literature, film, and visual art with the historical concerns, knowledge claims, and rhetoric of Western science and philosophy, revealing the disavowed literary and aesthetic projects of science and philosophy and clarifying the fundamental function of antiblackness in their metaphysics. In doing so, the African diasporic speculative and experimental practices featured in her work are regarded as modalities of theory and philosophy and their formal strategies investigated for what they make available for (dis)ordering the reigning operations of perception, sense, and thought. By reading Western philosophy and science through the lens of heterogeneous African diasporic speculative and experimental practices, Jackson's research situates and problematizes troubling yet authoritative conceptualizations of being and existence, demonstrating that literary studies—and African diasporic literary and visual artistic studies in particular— have an important role to play in the histories of science and philosophy. Professor Jackson is currently at work on a book: “Obscure Light: Blackness and the Derangement of Sex/Gender.”
Jackson’s work has appeared in scholarly journals such as Feminist Studies, e-flux, Gay and Lesbian Quarterly, Qui Parle: Critical Humanities and Social Sciences, South Atlantic Quarterly, and Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, and Technoscience in addition to exhibition catalogues for the Venice Architecture Biennale, Whitney Museum, Hammer Museum, The Studio Museum of Harlem, White Chapel Gallery, among others. Jackson’s articles can be found at zakiyyahimanjackson.com.
Unless otherwise indicated, scholarly articles published by Duke faculty members are made available here with a CC-BY-NC (Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial) license, as enabled by the Duke Open Access Policy. If you wish to use the materials in ways not already permitted under CC-BY-NC, please consult the copyright owner. Other materials are made available here through the author’s grant of a non-exclusive license to make their work openly accessible.