Being Property Once Myself is destined to be an event. Exhilarating and original, it is as much a work of literary history as it is of literary theory, as much a poetic invocation as it is critical intervention, and as much about animals as it is about people, elegantly uniting the many singularities that constitute, collectively, black literary culture.--Akira Mizuta Lippit, author of Electric Animal: Toward a Rhetoric of Wildlife
Bennett writes so beautifully that it hurts. Imagine a world of animals--rats, cocks, mules, and dogs--that prompt renewed ways of seeing, thinking, and living beyond cages or chains. These absorbing, deeply moving pages bring to life a newly reclaimed ethics, and black feeling beyond the claims of property or propriety.--Colin Dayan, author of With Dogs at the Edge of Life and The Law Is a White Dog
A tremendously illuminating study of how black writers wrestle with black precarity. Bennett's refreshing and field-defining approach shows how both classic and contemporary African American authors undo long-held assumptions of the animal-human divide.--Salamishah Tillet, author of Sites of Slavery: Citizenship and Racial Democracy in the Post-Civil Rights Imagination
A gripping work...Bennett's lyrical lilt in his sharp analyses makes for a thorough yet accessible read...Adds to a growing body of critical work that tackles social issues in relation to the realm of 'nature, ' pushing back simultaneously against the whiteness of both literary studies and ecocriticism.--Lydia Ayame Hiraide "LSE Review of Books" (1/8/2021 12:00:00 AM)
This trenchant work of literary criticism examines the complex ways 20th- and 21st-century African American authors have written about animals. In Bennett's analysis, Richard Wright, Toni Morrison, Jesmyn Ward, and others subvert the racist comparisons that have 'been used against them as a tool of derision and denigration.'...An intense and illuminating reevaluation of black literature and Western thought.--Ron Charles "Washington Post"
By turns leading-edge and unaffected, revelatory and understated, Bennett appears much less concerned to prove that his chops as a critic and theorist are equal to his poetic abilities...By way of close readings of some well-established, and a few wholly unnoticed, scenes of black/Animal apposition or relationality, Bennett's Being Property shares in the ensemblic turn toward black ecological criticism and theory exploring blackness, animality, ground-life, and philosophical posthumanism...Bennett stands to add many more fans to the crowd of us who've relished his poetic talents over many years.--Maurice Wallace "S-USIH: Society for U.S. Intellectual History" (8/6/2022 12:00:00 AM)
Bennett makes an important contribution to the fields of Black studies and critical animal studies while offering a uniquely lyrical voice of literary criticism.--Bénédicte Boisseron "American Literary History" (9/29/2022 12:00:00 AM)