Diversity and InclusivenessBlack Issues in Philosophy: Australian Continental Philosophy

Black Issues in Philosophy: Australian Continental Philosophy

By Bryan Mukandi

I suspect that just about every Shona child who grew up in the Zimbabwe of the 1980s through to the mid-1990s grew up being reminded of the proverb: “Mwana wamambo muranda kumwe.” The king’s child, when in another kingdom, when elsewhere, is (no better than) a servant. It served as a caution against a sense of entitlement, and it was also a call for cognizance of one’s place.

That the question of place is front and center of an African-Australian early career researcher’s attempt to make sense of Continental Philosophy in Australia is perhaps to be expected. My impression, however, is that beyond questions of my own standing, the question of place is, or ought to be, front and center of Continental Philosophy in Australia.

Allow me to explain. In 1788, a British fleet arrived on the shores of what is now Australia. Part of participation in the project that is “Australia” is joining the communal pretense that time on this landmass began with that arrival. As such, that fleet is referred to as “the First Fleet.” Settlement and colonization of this landmass was predicated on the legal fiction terra nullius. Early settlers simply decided that for legal purposes the land was vacant save for flora and fauna. Indigenous resistance to this fiction was met with extreme force. In 1830 Tasmania, for example, when Aboriginal peoples’ military assertion of Aboriginal presence grew intolerable to the settlers, the “Black Line” was formed. Armed settlers made a line and attempted to walk the length of the island in order to discover and remove Aboriginal men, women, and children. Over the years, as settlers sought to add to Australia’s population through immigration, they were careful to curate their additions carefully. One tool they employed to this end was the enactment of the self-explanatory “White Australia Policy.”  In short, much of the history of Australia, much of the project that is this nation state, has been the transplantation of Europe onto this Oceanic landmass.

What I find fascinating about Continental Philosophy in Australia is that for the most part, it does a far better job of pretending and seriously engaging in the make believe notion of a Euro-Australia than the general public, parliament, or the Rupert Murdoch press. Continental Philosophy here seems more faithful to the national project of transplantation and pretense than most other facets of Australian society. There really is something almost breathtakingly profound about a group of people who think and teach in sophisticated ways on Martin Heidegger’s insights on what philosophers have left “unthought”; Hannah Arendt on the dangers of the failure to think; Louis Althusser on the ideological state apparatus and its relation to the repressive state apparatus; Maurice Merleau-Ponty on place; Jacques Derrida’s form of deconstruction; and so on and so forth while overwhelmingly refusing to think what it means to philosophize here. Simply look up Australian philosophy departments, whether analytical-oriented or Continental, and take a look at which courses are offered, which are not, and who is employed there.

Australia’s pretense has been productive in a number of ways, including the production of a large body of philosophical literature. In comparison, African philosophy has at different periods been bogged down by the question, “What is African philosophy?”

Be that as it may, what has emerged from that at times unproductive debate is an acute cognizance of the fact that thought is embodied, that there can be no love of wisdom that does not grapple with the experiences of the people in that place, and that philosophy has to do with contributing to a society’s attempts to make sense of its place. In Australia, however, what goes by Continental Philosophy, particularly in university philosophy departments, seems overwhelmingly given to the reproduction of Europe, and to the acquisition of some esteem or status imagined to inhere in Europe. More, perhaps, than the rest of Australian society, Continental Philosophy here seems gripped by its own imagined anxiety that outside of Europe is nothing, save perhaps flora and fauna. This, it seems to me, is why we are so reluctant to grapple seriously with the people, work, and ideas that draw on traditions that have emerged in and around this place, and that precede (and follow) European contact. We are comfortable with plurality and fusion with respect to our cuisine but not at the level of ideas or thinkers.

There are and have for many years been, of course, people doing really interesting philosophical work that earnestly grapples with the realities of this place. Typically that work has occurred outside or on the margins of philosophy, but this year’s Australasian Society for Continental Philosophy (ASCP) Conference, held in Hobart, Tasmania, from November 28th to December 1st,  suggests that things may be changing. To the best of my knowledge, one of this year’s keynotes, Lewis Gordon, was the first person of color to deliver a keynote address at the annual conference.

Closing panel discussion on justice and the decolonization of knowledge. Panelists: Elaine Miller, Sigi Jöttkandt, Marguerite La Caze, and Lewis Gordon.

To have the author of Disciplinary Decadence and Bad Faith and Antiblack Racism challenge us to think about racism, sexism, and decolonization in Tasmania marked a profound departure from previous conferences. The tenor of the conference was affected deeply by his presence and his engagement with junior scholars. It comes as no surprise that his invitation coincided with the largest contingent of philosophers of color and white philosophers working on coloniality, decoloniality, and the critical philosophy of race that I have seen at an ASCP event. Nor am I surprised by the energy, excitement and optimism that many of us experienced at the end of the conference.

Lewis Gordon and Bryan Mukandi after the closing session of the Australasian Continental Philosophy Society conference in Hobart, Tasmania.

Now that serious strides have been made at overturning our philosophical “White Australia Policy,” perhaps we will turn our attention to our “Black Line.”  It is embarrassing that we have never had an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander keynote speaker at the ASCP conference, despite the international standing and philosophical contributions of Aileen Moreton-Robinson and Martin Nakata, for example. Then again, Aboriginal scholar Irene Watson will deliver a keynote address at the 2018 Luce Irigaray Circle, which will be held in Canada.

As every great journey begins proverbially with its first step, the success of the recent ASCP is a sign of, in respect to another great adage, what is to be done.

 

Bryan Mukandi has a medical degree from the University of Zimbabwe and a PhD in Philosophy from the University of Queensland, where he works as a lecturer in medical ethics. His research interests revolve around how me make sense of others and ourselves, and how that affects our health wellbeing.

 

Announcements

The following session was not properly advertised in the American Philosophical Association 2018 Eastern Division meeting’s program.   The conference will take place at the Savannah Convention Center, 1 International Drive, Savannah, Georgia 31402.  Here is the full list of presenters along with their abstracts:

Philosophical Reflections on Kendrick Lamar’s Afro-Jewish Subjectivity (10L)
Friday, January 5, 2018: 9:00 AM–11:00 AM
Co-sponsored by the Caribbean Philosophical Association

Chair:              Lewis Gordon (UCONN-Storrs)

 Presenters:

 André E. Key (Claflin University)

Title:  “Damnation and Identity: The problem of moral epistemology and ethnic suffering in Kendrick Lamar’s DAMN”

Kendrick Lamar’s fourth album, Damn, (stylized “DAMN”) has been on the Billboard charts since its release. On the record’s third track, “YAH,” it appears Kendrick Lamar has embraced a stream of Afro-Jewish religion commonly referred to as Black Judaism.   His embrace is directly tied to the conception of ethnic suffering as the result of divine will rather than human agency.  In such a conception, black people’s ongoing and transgenerational suffering demands they construct identities that argue for ethnic chosenness in an anti-black racist society.   My reflections in this paper will address the relevance of moral epistemologies for ascertaining Afro-Jewish cultural coherence and identity.  Specifically, I will argue that Kendrick Lamar’s recent album DAMN represents an expansion of this Afro-Jewish perspective on ethnic suffering by signifying the concept of damnation as a legitimizing marker of identity.  Afro-Jews, in the face of expansive moral evil and the constant death of black bodies, have not only posited interesting challenges to both traditional and contemporary categories of moral epistemology, they have instead articulated a theodicean framework for black identity, an identity that legitimates anti-black violence under the guise of experiencing liberation from it.

 

Walter R. Isaac (Savannah State University)

Title: “Possible World-Traveling and Ethnic Appropriation in Kendrick Lamar’s Afro-Judaism”

For generations Afro-Jewish narratives have been typecast as some form of cultural or ethnic appropriation of historically stereotyped Jewish communal narratives.  Concepts such as Jacob Dorman’s “black orientalism” have continued this tradition of distinguishing seemingly authentic Jewish narratives from historically suspect ones.  In Kendrick Lamar’s recent album, DAMN, hearers are introduced to a version of Afro-Jewish language that has, from its inception, exemplified this problem to both Jewish philosophers and theorists of African American religious thought.

In my paper I will apply Maria Lugones’ concept of world-traveling to Lamar’s new articulation of an Afro-Jewish identity as rooted in possibility.  According to the tradition from which Lamar appeals, the world is one in which there are true Jews and false Jews.  Thus Lamar’s possibility is tied to claims of proof texts, both sacred and secular, in which allegations of ethnic appropriation themselves become markers of an Other’s appropriation.  These are controversial claims, particularly given contemporary decolonial theory’s cautionary notes about the dangers of epistemological colonialism.  In my paper I will evaluate the extent to which Lugones’ notion of world-traveling can function as a response to these concerns, both by being incorporated into Lamar’s performance of possibility and also being asserted as a kind of disposition towards the construction of Afro-Jewish worlds.

 

Devon R. Johnson (Rutgers University)

Title:  “Reflections on Kendrick Lamar’s Phenomenological Nihilism”

Kendrick Lamar’s mobilization of Afro-Israelite religious existential and metaphysical narratives can be read as a philosophical meditation on and response to the questions of black nihilism in America. I would like to explain how Lamar’s nihilism is a form of a necessary phenomenological response to the pessimistic realities of black existential life. To do so I will develop Nietzsche’s distinction between “passive” and “active” forms of nihilism and further distinguish into categories of “strong” and “weak.”  I develop Nietzsche’s framework by applying it and considering it within the context of black existentialism and Afro Jewish thought, i.e.- the thought of Franz Fanon and Albert Memmi, raising questions concerning what can be called “Black Nihilism.” What Lamar’s and other Afro-religious perspectives share in common is a pointing towards an interesting tension between demands for the phenomenological production of such narratives, and the possibilities for further narratives of nihilistic strength. I will explore these dynamics of Lamar’s music in this essay.

6 COMMENTS

  1. This is a huge problem. From early education onwards. Throughout my entire education from kindergarten to arts graduate I had not heard the truth of Aboriginal people. When I was 32 I walked around Circular Quay in Sydney and I saw a statue of Pemulwuy. You could imagine my rage.

    In the yes/no vote I’ve heard some talk from people of the land. The Uluru Statement for yes wants a treaty signed, reparations and truth in education – to my understanding. I was drinking in a pub and got talking to some Gamilaroi people. They had said no recognition, no vote and please relegate us to the Flora and Fauna Act because as threatened species we would be doing a hell of a lot better than what’s happening now.

  2. The general sense of superiority of the West has deeper metaphysical roots; they had acquired hi-tech firearms first in the world,so all proverbial advantages of the powerful that followed mankind from her jungle times remained with them! Her ways are the only CIVILIZED way was the first premise that naturally followed!
    Rest of the world had no defence, as it was an aggressive Western take over of the entire world since the days of colonisation! West still genuinely believe,she has taught the world CIVILIZATION.
    Our present day capitalistic-industrial-democratic model,where the writ of the rich&politically powerful only runs is that CIVILIZATIONAL model!
    An easy paradigm-shift is just unthinkable. Is life all about personal economic SUCCESS? Is freedom that man has under free-market? Is defeating and having control over Nature is expected of man&human-societies? Serious questions that only West can rethink& then remodel the world!
    Love to share few supportive links:

    http://understandinginflationinanewlight.blogspot.in/2015/03/seeking-origins-of-notion-of-human.html?m=1
    http://argumentsagainstscientificpositivism.blogspot.in/2016/01/the-initial-motivational-energies.html?m=1

    http://understandinginflationinanewlight.blogspot.in/2014/12/freedom-and-free-market-are-they.html?m=1

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