New Bones Abolition:

Captive Maternal Agency and the Afterlife of Erica Garner

Description

Reflecting on police violence, political movements, Black feminism, Erica Garner, Mumia Abu-Jamal, caretakers and compradors, Joy James analyzes the “Captive Maternal,” which emerges from legacies of colonialism, chattel slavery and predatory policing, to explore the stages of resistance and communal rebellion that manifest through war resistance. She recognizes a long line of gendered and ungendered freedom fighters, who, within a racialized and economically-stratified democracy, transform from coerced or conflicted caretakers into builders of movements, who realize the necessity of maroon spaces, and ultimately the inevitability of becoming war resisters that mobilize against genocide and state violence.

New Bones Abolition weaves a narrative of a historically complex and engaged people seeking to quell state violence. James discusses the contributions of the mother Mamie Till-Mobley who held a 1955 open-casket funeral for her fourteen-year-old Emmett Till, murdered by white nationalists; the 1971 rebels at Attica prison; the resilience of political prisoners despite the surplus torture they endured; the emergence of Black feminists as political theorists; human rights advocates seeking abolition; and the radical intellectualism of Erica Garner, daughter of Eric Garner slain in 2014 by the NYPD. James positions the Captive Maternal within the evolution of contemporary abolition. Her meditation on, and theorizing of, Black radicals and revolutionaries works to honor Agape-driven communities and organizers that deter state/police predatory violence through love, caretaking, protest, movements, marronage, and war resistance.

...New Bones Abolition honors the ancestors of centuries-long and present-day freedom movements and grounds their legacies as inheritances for the rebels and war resisters among us who are fighting for a future without police and state violence.
— Charmaine Chua, University of California, Santa Barbara, Global Studies

First Presbyterian Church of Brooklyn Black History Keynote: (New Bones) Abolition & Revolutionary Love

Media

More Resources on NBA (2023)

On December 20, 2023, Dr. Joy James comes back on the show to discuss her most recent book, published October 2023: “New Bones Abolition: Captive Maternal Agency and the (After)life of Erica Garner.

Dr. Joy James joins The Black Myths Podcast to talk about her new book "New Bones Abolition: Captive Maternal Agency and the (After)life of Erica Garner", and the question of the lesser evil.

Podcasts

Press

BAR Book Forum: Joy James' Book, “New Bones Abolition”

Previous
Previous

Contextualizing Angela Davis (2024)

Next
Next

In Pursuit of Revolutionary Love (2022)