A watershed moment


A watershed moment

Press Release

Written by: Race & Class


Race & Class: A Watershed Moment

 

The October issue of Race & Class contains key articles that make sense of the crises we are in – of COVID-19, of racist state violence and of global capitalism – and asks, is this a watershed moment?

This year, the COVID-9 pandemic and the Black Lives Matter anti-racist upheaval have dominated the headlines across the world. Key Race & Class analysts make sense of this current moment. In ‘Global capitalism post-pandemic’, professor of sociology and global studies William I. Robinson reveals how the pandemic is accelerating the process of global capitalist restructuring, helping a new bloc of transnational capital to amass ever-greater power.

The technologies of the global police state were brought out in full force against hundreds of thousands of anti-racist Black Lives Matter protesters across the US following the killing of George Floyd. In a crucial interview with black feminist organiser Barbara Ransby she describes how the movement for black lives in the US is a watershed moment that has been years in the making, with black feminists leading the way, pushing a radical, holistic approach to liberation. Two books by political writer Mike Davis, reviewed by UK activist Joseph Maggs, resonate powerfully amid the on-going Black Lives Matter uprisings – The Monster Enters which argues for a reckoning with the global capitalist system, and Set the Night on Fire: on the activism of Black and Chicano LA youth in the ‘60s.

Racist state violence impacts a range of communities, and the early months of 2020 witnessed a spike in anti-Asian violence in the US. Associate professor of history at the University of California, San Diego, Simeon Mann provides a historical lens through which to understand anti-Asian racism, arguing that ‘anti-Asian violence should be seen not merely as episodic or as individual acts of violence targeting Asian peoples but as a structure of US settler colonialism and racial capitalism.’ In a similar vein, professor of media studies Deepa Kumar in a seminal piece on ‘Terrorcraft’, traces the making of the racialised terrorist threat in relation to Arabs and Muslims from the 1960s to the mid-‘80s, revealing how it was crafted deep in the US Empire.

 

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Cover photograph taken by Jesse Freeman, at a Black Lives Matter protest on 30 May 2020 in Omaha, Nebraska.

View the whole issue online here


The Institute of Race Relations is precluded from expressing a corporate view: any opinions expressed are therefore those of the authors.

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