The co-op bookstore for avid readers
Book Cover for: Insurrection: Rebellion, Civil Rights, and the Paradoxical State of Black Citizenship, Hawa Allan

Insurrection: Rebellion, Civil Rights, and the Paradoxical State of Black Citizenship

Hawa Allan

Critic Reviews

Good

Based on 4 reviews on

BookMarks logo

We can't talk about the Insurrection Act in America without talking about race. The Act was passed in 1807 to give the president the ability to deploy federal military forces domestically to fend off rebellion against slavery--amid the silent fear that enslaved people would violently revolt en masse against their bondage. Later, in a curious paradox, the Act was used to enforce the civil rights of African Americans, defending the entry of Black students into previously segregated educational institutions, but also to quell riots that erupted after Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination. Over history, its overall application has swung between protection of white property and protection of Black people, depending on political context. More recently, the Insurrection Act was invoked to suppress the so-called "race riots" in Los Angeles in 1992. President Trump has often threatened to use its power to deploy federal troops to American cities, both in response to the nationwide protests following George Floyd's killing in 2020 and during his second presidency.

Since its conception two centuries ago, the Act has never been free of entanglement with race. Lawyer and critic Hawa Allan's distinctly literary voice delivers paradigm-shifting reflections on not only the Act itself, but also recurring patterns in American history, which cycles between calls for Black equity and the responding reaction of white resentment--between racial "progress" and retrenchment. Throughout, she also draws revealing insight from her own experiences as one of the only Black girls in her leafy Long Island suburb, as a Black lawyer at a predominantly white firm during a visit from presidential candidate Barack Obama, and as a thinker about the use and misuse of appeals to law and order. Luminous and profound, deeply researched and intensely felt, Insurrection is necessary reading in our reckoning with structural racism, government power, and protest in the United States.

Book Details

  • Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
  • Publish Date: Jan 4th, 2022
  • Pages: 272
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.00in - 6.10in - 1.00in - 1.20lb
  • EAN: 9781324003038
  • Categories: African American & BlackUnited States - GeneralCivil Rights

About the Author

Allan, Hawa: - Hawa Allan is an attorney and author whose work has appeared in the Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Review of Books, Lapham's Quarterly, and the Baffler, among other publications. She lives and works in New York City.

Critics’ reviews

Praise for this book

'All of history is happening right now, ' observes Hawa Allan in this beautifully written history of the complex, paradoxical role of the Insurrection Act in American life. ?Allan's profoundly moving book exposes the emotional underbelly of slavery's traumatic legacy on both enslavers and enslaved, and on all the generations since. The affective echo of that moral crisis remains entangled in today's most urgent conflagrations. In a moment as deeply divided as ours, Allan's book offers principled and reflective pause.--Patricia J. Williams author of Giving a Damn
Hawa ?Allan speaks with the cool, clear, analytical rigor of the highly trained legal scholar, the detached bemusement of the social anthropologist who declines to go native, the eloquence of the poet, and the sublimated autobiographical anger of the unwilling recipient of this country's doggedly persistent attempts to deny the rights of full and equal citizenship to Americans of acknowledged African descent. Her prose is mesmerizing; her voice is fresh, original, and completely unique. ?Insurrection ?is a profound historical meditation on the American pathology, the brilliant debut of a major thinker on the American intellectual scene.--Adrian Piper, author of Escape to Berlin
Eloquently mixing history, autobiography, and philosophy, this powerful account sheds new light on the Black experience in America.-- "Publishers Weekly (starred review)"