A rhetorical framework to comprehend anti-black violence
today within racialized citizenship since reconstruction.
While victims of antebellum
lynchings were typically white men, postbellum lynchings became more frequent
and more intense, with the victims more often black. After Reconstruction,
lynchings exhibited and embodied links between violent collective action,
American civic identity, and the making of the nation.
Ersula J. Ore investigates lynching
as a racialized practice of civic engagement, in effect an argument against
black inclusion within the changing nation. Ore scrutinizes the civic roots of
lynching, the relationship between lynching and white constitutionalism, and
contemporary manifestations of lynching discourse and logic today. From the
1880s onward, lynchings, she finds, manifested a violent form of symbolic
action that called a national public into existence, denoted citizenship, and
upheld political community.
Grounded in Ida B. Wells' summation
of lynching as a social contract among whites to maintain a racial order, at
its core, Ore's book speaks to racialized violence as a mode of civic
engagement. Since violence enacts an argument about citizenship, Ore construes
lynching and its expressions as part and parcel of America's rhetorical
tradition and political legacy.
Drawing upon newspapers, official
records, and memoirs, as well as critical race theory, Ore outlines the
connections between what was said and written, the material practices of
lynching in the past, and the forms these rhetorics and practices assume now.
In doing so, she demonstrates how lynching functioned as a strategy interwoven
with the formation of America's national identity and with the nation's need to
continually restrict and redefine that identity. In addition, Ore ties black
resistance to lynching, the acclaimed exhibit Without Sanctuary, recent police
brutality, effigies of Barack Obama, and the killing of Trayvon Martin.
ERSULA J. ORE is the Lincoln
Professor of Ethics in the School of Social Transformation and assistant
professor of African and African American studies and rhetoric at Arizona State
University. Her work has appeared in Rhetorics
of Whiteness: Postracial Hauntings in Popular Culture, Social Media, and
Education as well as Pedagogy:
Critical Approaches to Teaching Literature, Language, Composition, and Culture
and Present Tense: A Journal of Rhetoric
in Society.
Lynching: Violence, Rhetoric, and American Identity by
Ersula J. Ore
University Press of Mississippi ● ISBN 978-1-4968-2408-0 ● paper
University Press of Mississippi ● ISBN 978-1-4968-2408-0 ● paper
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