Chapter 6 Laundering a Massacre
Proposal review
From Black Wall Street to Black Capitalism
Abstract
Laundering Black Rage: The Washing of Black Death, People, Property, and Profits is a spatial and historical critique of the capitalist State that examines how Black Rage—conceived as a constructive and logical response to the conquest of resources, land, and human beings racialized as Black—is cleaned for the unyielding means of White capital. Interlacing political theory with international histories of Black rebellion, it presents a thoughtful challenge to the counterinsurgent tactics of the State that consistently convert Black Rage into a commodity to be bought, sold, and repressed. Laundering Black Rage investigates how the Rage directed at the police murder of George Floyd could be marshalled to funnel the Black Lives Matter movement into corporate advertising and questionable leadership, while increasing the police budgets inside the laundry cities of capital - largely with our consent. Essayist/Performer Too Black and Geographer Rasul A. Mowatt assert Black Rage as a threat to the flow of capital and the established order of things, which must therefore be managed by the process of laundering. Intertwining stories of Black resistance throughout the African diaspora, State building under capitalism, cities as sites of laundering, and the world making of empire, Laundering Black Rage also lays the groundwork for upending the laundering process through an anti-colonial struggle of reverse-laundering conquest. Relevant to studies of race and culture, history, politics, and the built environment, this pathbreaking work is essential reading for scholars and organizers enraged at capitalism and White supremacy laundering their work for nefarious means.
Keywords
Gentrification,Neighborhood change,Urban economics,Urban studies,Quantitative analysis,Census tract data,Income gentrification,Occupational gentrification,Educational gentrification,Gentrifiable tracts,Potentially gentrifying tracts,Housing,Affordable housing,Housing markets,Real estate,Urban housing,Low income neighborhoods,Ruth Glass,Geography,Urban geography,Quantitative methods,GIS,GIS data,Social Science,Studentification,State-led gentrification,Supergentrification,Tourism gentrification,Neighborhood stability,Urban sociology,Econometrics,Spatial injustice,Redlining,Restrictive covenants,Police violence,Urban planning,City planning,Kenosha,Portland,Parks,Mass incarceration,Public space,Spatial justice,Black Lives Matter,#BlackLivesMatter,Racism and built environment,Racism and zoning,Racism and planning,Violence work,Urban history,The State,Conquest,Social Movements,Social Capital,Capital,Black Wall Street,Black Rebellion,Pendleton 2,anti-colonialism,Abolition,White Capital,Black Buying Power,Tulsa Massacre,Patrice Lumumba,Counterinsurgency,Greenwood, Tulsa,Maroon,Black Liberation,George Floyd,Black Power,Minneapolis, MN,Indianapolis, IN,White Rage,Settler Colonialism,Capitalism,ImperialismDOI
10.1201/9781003453987-9ISBN
9781003453987, 9781032592824, 9781032573779Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
2024Grantor
Imprint
RoutledgeClassification
Political ideologies and movements
Human geography
Ethnic studies
Indigenous peoples
Relating to Indigenous peoples


Download