Resource Radicalism and the Solar System of Black Empire
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| Publication date | 2019 |
| Journal | Open Library of the Humanities |
| Article number | 56 |
| Volume | Issue number | 5 | 1 |
| Number of pages | 18 |
| Organisations |
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| Abstract |
This article isolates an overlooked preoccupation in 1930s African American literature with America’s emergent energy system and a literary history of power indispensable to understanding today’s energy crisis as a social crisis. For George Schuyler, the physical power of a recently gridded America exposes the intractability of a racial politics from the inequalities accelerated in the nation’s new energy infrastructure. Schuyler’s Black Empire (1938 [1991]) contributes to the literary history of energy by turning the specifically aesthetic qualities of energy into a source of resource radicalism—what anthropologist Dominic Boyer calls ‘energopower’—exposing the two sides of power and the narrative shape of an energy system to come.
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| Document type | Article |
| Note | Special Collection: Powering the Future: Energy Resources in Science Fiction and Fantasy |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.16995/olh.96 |
| Downloads |
96-3819-1-PB
(Final published version)
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