
New Books in Critical Theory Mark Christian Thompson, "Phenomenal Blackness: Black Power, Philosophy, and Theory" (U Chicago Press, 2022)
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Jan 17, 2026 Mark Christian Thompson, Krieger-Eisenhower Professor of English at Johns Hopkins University, delves into his book, Phenomenal Blackness. He explores the evolution from sociological to phenomenological perspectives in African American thought, highlighting figures like James Baldwin and Amiri Baraka. Thompson emphasizes the importance of language in cultural expression and critiques essentialism through Malcolm X's strategies. He discusses how thinkers like Angela Davis merge philosophy with activism, showcasing the need for criticisms that drive political change.
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Phenomenal Blackness As Philosophical Turn
- Phenomenal Blackness names a mid-century move toward phenomenology to understand Blackness beyond mere social construction.
- Thompson reads 1960s thinkers as treating Blackness as a spiritual or ontological essence rather than biological determinism.
Rejecting 'Genealogy' As Limiting Frame
- Thompson avoids calling the project a genealogy to resist pinning these thinkers into a single Foucauldian lineage.
- He frames his work as historicist intellectual history with a critical edge rather than a neutral genealogy.
Language As Primary Social Medium
- Baraka and others reframe literary language as the primary social expression of Blackness because language builds accessible community.
- For Baraka, 'literariness' captures musical and visual forms through a shared discursive mode anyone can engage with.





