Making Abolitionist Worlds gathers key insights and interventions from today's international abolitionist movement to pose the question: what does an abolitionist world look like? The Abolition Collective investigates the core challenges to social justice and the liberatory potential of social movements today from a range of personal, political, and analytical points of view, underscoring the urgency of an abolitionist politics that places prisons at the center of its critique and actions.
In addition to centering and amplifying the continual struggles of incarcerated people who are actively working to transform prisons from the inside, Making Abolitionist Worlds animates the idea of abolitionist democracy and demands a radical re-imagining of the meaning and practice of democracy. Abolition Collective brings us to an Israeli prison for a Palestinian feminist reflection on incarceration within settler colonialism; to protest movements in Hong Kong and elsewhere, who use ""abolition democracy"" to advocate for the abolition of the police; to the growing culture in the United States of ""aggrieved whiteness,"" which trucks in fear, anger, victimhood, and a need for vengeance to maintain white supremacy; to the punitive landscapes that extend from the incarceration of political prisoners to the mass deportations and detentions along the U.S. southern border.
Making Abolitionist Worlds shows us that the paths forged today for a world in formation are rooted in antiracism, decolonization, anticapitalism, abolitionist feminism, and queer liberation.
Edited by:
Abolition Collective
Imprint: Common Notions
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 228mm,
Width: 152mm,
ISBN: 9781942173175
ISBN 10: 1942173172
Series: Abolition: Journal of Insurgent Politics
Pages: 272
Publication Date: 04 January 2021
Audience:
General/trade
,
ELT Advanced
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
Introduction Manifesto of the Abolition Journal Dis-Organizing Prisons and Building Together, Inside/Outside—Stevie Wilson It Has to Burn Before It Can Grow: An Interview with Amanda Priebe—Brooke Lober Burn It Down: Abolition, Insurgent Political Praxis, and the Destruction of Decency—Katherine, Kelly, and Abraham Already Something More: Heteropatriarchy and the Limitations of Rights, Inclusion, and the Universal—J Sebastian Democracy Against Representation: A Radical Realist View—Paul Raekstad A Family Like Mine—Shana L. Redmond Abuse Thrives on Silence: The #VaughnRebellion in Context—Kim Wilson From the Vaughn Uprising: “For a Safer, More Secure, and More Humane Prison.” On Behalf of the Prisoners at James T. Vaughn Correctional Center Aggrieved Whiteness: White Identity Politics and Modern American Racial Formation—Mike King Abolitionist Democracy: Fear, Loathing, and Violence in the 2016 Campaign—Joy James The Pitfalls of White Liberal Panic—Dylan Rodríguez As the US Oligarchy Expands Its War, Middle Class White People Must Take a Side—Robert Nichols Notes on Photography, Power, and Insurgent Looks—Stefanie Fock We Can Be Here Another Five Hundred Years: A Critical Reflection on Shiri Pasternak’s Grounded Authority—Nick Estes How Does State Sovereignty Matter?—Shiri Pasternak’s Response to Nick Estes Zionism and Native American Studies—Steven Salaita I Will Kiss the Ground of My Cell… As It Is Part of My Homeland, Spatial Politics and Gender: Israel’s Carcerality of Palestinian Women—Nicole Printy Is Marxism Relevant? Some Uses and Misuses—David Gilbert, political prisoner. Meeting Mumia Abu-Jamal: The Most Well-Known Political Prisoner in the US—Robyn C. Spencer Art by: Heidi Sincuba, Amanda Priebe, Nilda Brooklyn and Adrien Leavitt, Priti Gulati Cox, Jesus Barraza and Melanie Cervantes, and Jess X. Snow
Abolition: A Journal of Insurgent Politics is a collectively-run project supporting radical scholarly and activist ideas, poetry, and art that encourages us to make the impossible possible, to seek transformation well beyond policy changes, and toward revolutionary abolitionism.
Reviews for Making Abolitionist Worlds: Proposals for a World on Fire
The Abolition Collective embodies the kind of work anybody interested in justice should aspire to reproduce. Astute, rigorous, and uncompromising, the collective seeks to bring radical perspectives to a wide readership within and beyond academe. With the publication of its inaugural issue we are treated to the very best of revolutionary analysis. Anybody interested in upending a carceral and colonial order will find plenty of inspiration here. Something we all need and do well to pass along. --Steven Salaita, author of Inter/Nationalism: Decolonizing Native America and Palestine The Abolition Collective offers a unique, revolutionary lens through which to view, analyze and fight against capitalism and patriarchy on the terrain of the prison-industrial complex. It aims to combine an abolitionist message with a democratic production process that prioritizes participation of those directly affected by incarceration. What a welcome and needed approach! I am confident the project will help intellectuals build ties of solidarity across race, class, gender, nationality, and other borders that block liberation and in its finest moments will help teach us, as Mumia says, to 'fight with light in our eyes.' --James Kilgore, author of Understanding Mass Incarceration: A People's Guide to the Key Civil Rights Struggle of Our Time