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A conversation with Alex Madva, Vanessa Wills, Ian Olasov, and Dana Miranda on the edited collection The Movement for Black Lives: Philosophical Perspectives, out with Oxford University Press in late-2021.
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This discussion is with four contributors to a new edited collection titled The Movement for Black Lives: Philosophical Perspectives, published in late-2021 by Oxford University Press. We’re joined by Alex Madva, who teaches in the Department of Philosophy at Cal Poly Pomona, where he also directs the California Center for Ethics and Policy. Along with Brandon Hogan, Michael Cholbi, and Benjamin Yost, he co-edited this collection and is the co-author with Cholbi of the included piece “Can Capital Punishment Survive Black Lives Matter”? Vanessa Wills, who teaches in the Department of Philosophy at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. and authored the essay “‘He Ate Jim Crow’: Racist Ideology as False Consciousness,” which takes up Karl Marx’s treatment of ideology as a way to understand the persistence of antiblack racism. Ian Olasov, a doctoral candidate at the CUNY Graduate Center in New York City, who authored an essay in the volume on philosophy, language, and how we talk about Black liberation, titled “The Movement for Black Lives and the Language of Liberation.” And Dana Miranda, who teaches in the Department of Philosophy at University of Massachusetts at Boston, the author of “The Violence of Leadership in Black Lives Matter,” which examines the relationship between movement aims and the distinction between leadership and mobilizations that are leaderful.
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