#You Know You're Black in France When: The Fact of Everyday Antiblackness


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Description

A groundbreaking study about everyday antiblackness and its refusal in an officially raceblind France.

What does it mean to be racialized-as-black in France on a daily basis? #You Know You're Black in France When... responds to that question. Under the banner of universalism, France messages a powerful and seductive ideology of blindness to race that disappears blackened people and the antiblackness they experience. As Trica Keaton notes, in everyday life, France is anything but raceblind.

In this interdisciplinary study, drawn from a range of critical scholarship including that of Philomena Essed and Frantz Fanon, Keaton illuminates how b/Black (racialized/politicized) French people distinctly expose and refuse what she calls "raceblind republicanism." By officially turning a blind eye to the specificity of antiblackness, the French state in fact perpetuates it, she argues, along with structural racism. Through daily life, public policies, visual culture, the private lives of individuals and families shattered by police violence, the French courts where many are fighting back, and her own experiences, Keaton charts the troubling dynamics and continuities of antiblackness in French society.

Author: Trica Keaton
Publisher: MIT Press
Published: 02/14/2023
Pages: 304
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.80lbs
Size: 9.20h x 7.10w x 0.90d
ISBN13: 9780262047784
ISBN10: 0262047780
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Race & Ethnic Relations
- Political Science | World | European
- History | African American & Black

About the Author
Professor Trica Keaton is in the Department of African and African American Studies at Dartmouth College with affiliations in Film and Media Studies and Sociology. Her past books include Muslim Girls and the Other France: Race, Identity Politics, & Social Exclusion, Black Europe and the African Diaspora, and Black France/France Noire: The History and Politics of Blackness.