Every so often, a book comes along that changes the way we see, speak, and think about the world. <i>Shattered</i> is one of those books. Chapman’s relentless prose interweaves compelling narrative with groundbreaking critical race theory in an unflinching analysis of the day-to-day violence inflicted on black beings in an antiblack world. A must-read for anyone seeking a deeper understanding of race relations in America and answers to why black liberation remains deferred."—Frank B. Wilderson III, author of <i>Afropessimism</i> and <i>Incognegro</i><br /><br />"Every so often, a book comes along that changes the way we see, speak, and think about the world. <i>Shattered</i> is one of those books."—Frank B. Wilderson III, author of <i>Afropessimism</i> and <i>Incognegro</i>

A heartrending and engrossing memoir that challenges narratives of racial progress and postracial America.

From a distance, Matthieu Chapman’s life and accomplishments serve as an example of racial progress in America: the first in his family to go to college, he earns two master’s degrees and a doctorate and then becomes a professor of theater. Despite his personal and academic success, however, the specter of antiblackness continues to haunt his every moment and interaction.

Told through fragments, facets, shards, slivers, splinters, and absences, Shattered places Chapman’s own story in dialogue with US history and structural analysis of race to relay the experience of being very alive in a demonstrably antiblack society—laying bare the impact of the American way on black bodies, black psyches, and black lives. From the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to the offices of higher education, from a Loyal White Knights flyer on his windshield to a play with black students written by a black playwright, Chapman’s life story embodies the resistance that occurs, the shattering, collapsing, and reconfiguring of being that happens in the collisions between conceptions of blackness. Shattered is a heartrending and thought-provoking challenge to narratives of racial progress and postracial America—an important reminder that systemic antiblack racism affects every black person regardless of what they achieve in spite of it.

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Told through fragments, facets, slivers, splinters, and absences, Shattered places Matthieu Chapman’s story in dialogue with US history and structural analysis of race to relay the experience of being very alive in a demonstrably antiblack society - laying bare the impact of the American way on black bodies, black psyches, and black lives.
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  • Half-Title
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Reclusive Socialist Poet
  • John the Baptist and Orpheus
  • Why I Voted the Socialist Ticket, Vachel Lindsay
  • Lorine Niedecker
  • Reclusive Socialist Poet
  • The Oven Bird, Robert Frost
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Product details

ISBN
9781952271922
Published
2023-08-01
Publisher
West Virginia University Press
Weight
272 gr
Height
210 mm
Width
140 mm
Age
G, 01
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
458

Biographical note

Matthieu Chapman is assistant professor of theatre and head of theatre studies at SUNY New Paltz. His writing has been published in Huffington Post and Pithead Chapel, among others. He holds degrees in theatre and performance theory from San Diego State University, Mary Baldwin University, and University of California San Diego.