Creolizing Sartre
T Storm Heter editor Kris F Sealey editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:8th Dec '23
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Jean-Paul Sartre’s work has been taken up by writers outside of Europe, particularly in the Global South, who have developed phenomenological and existential analyses of racism, colonialism, and other structures of domination. Sartre’s philosophical concepts are fundamentally open, for instance his notions of humanism, bad-faith, and freedom.
As a situational, committed thinker, Sartre worked to illuminate the urgent questions of his time at the concrete and the abstract level. The creolization of Sartrean thinking is consistent with the existential projects of engagement, authenticity, political commitment, and liberation from oppression. This volume asks how his European model of phenomenology was (and can be) transformed when it is taken up by thinkers who have lived experience with colonialism. They book also engages Sartre in his relation to key interlocutors (especially Beauvoir and Fanon) who were influenced by him and who influenced him in turn. The book demonstrates how Sartrean philosophy is productively related to Africana philosophy, Africana phenomenology, and Africana existentialism.
This volume treats creolization not as a discrete topic, but as an interdisciplinary, global approach to reading and thinking. Each author’s contribution embodies an aspect of creolizing thinking, understood as the articulation of cultural and conceptual hybridity under conditions of eurocentrism, epistemic colonialism and the legacies of slavery. Creolizing Sartre re-reads Sartrean texts to recast existential themes through the lens of Caribbean philosophies and the broader philosophies of the Global South.
Contributors: Lawrence Bamikole, Sybil Newton Cooksey, James Haile III, Paget Henry, T Storm Heter, Thomas Meagher, Michael J. Monahan, Anthony Sean Neal, Nathalie Nya, Kris F. Sealey, Hiroaki Seki, Jonathan Webber.
Sartrean existentialism is its valuing of engaging others and listeningto them in order to realize truer realities. Listening to the consciousnesses of others, learning of the varieties of reflective voices andattitudes we may choose in relation to one another and the world,is perhaps how we most genuinely grow closer to understanding our own experiences of being. Creolizing Sartre is a wonderful, must-read, book that accomplishes exactly that. * Sartre Studies International *
Deploying creolizing as an interdisciplinary, critical method for taking up Sartre’s work, the chapters in this volume engage such notions as ontology, freedom, and humanism from the lived, material conditions of colonialism, settler colonialism, and the afterlives of enslavement. The book is a must-read for scholars seeking to expand their strategic, philosophical toolkits and further develop liberatory practices that speak to the pressing ethical-political issues of our day. -- Devonya Havis, associate professor, University at Buffalo
ISBN: 9781538162583
Dimensions: 239mm x 158mm x 21mm
Weight: 531g
250 pages