
New Books in Intellectual History Mark Christian Thompson, "Phenomenal Blackness: Black Power, Philosophy, and Theory" (U Chicago Press, 2022)
Jan 18, 2026
In this discussion, Mark Christian Thompson, a professor at Johns Hopkins University and author of Phenomenal Blackness, delves into the transformative journey of mid-century African American thinkers. He highlights the shift from sociology to German philosophy, emphasizing how figures like James Baldwin and Amiri Baraka redefined Black expression through literature and aesthetics. Thompson also explores Malcolm X's use of language to challenge white supremacy and Angela Davis's intersection of aesthetics with political activism, positioning her as a leading voice in Black critical theory.
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Phenomenal Blackness As Philosophical Move
- Phenomenology frames blackness as an experienced, spiritual essence rather than just a social construction.
- Thompson argues many 1960s thinkers sought an ontology of Black being distinct from biological racism.
Method: Engaged Intellectual History
- Thompson avoided 'genealogy' to prevent pinning authors into a single Foucauldian tradition.
- He frames his work as a form of engaged intellectual history that preserves theoretical edge.
Literariness As Communal Medium
- Baraka re-centers language and 'literariness' to make Black expressive culture widely accessible.
- He treats literary language as a communal medium that can build public discourse and identity.




