
Speaking Out of Place helps us find value and inspiration in others who have made change in the world where such things were not supposed to be possible.
From protests in sports arenas to sonic transgressions of racist boundaries, to protest camps and covert collaborations with imprisoned people, and environmental activism based on Indigenous notions of justice. We learn how to "re-place" education, circumvent pundits, and recall judges. And we learn to defend our home--the planet.
Speaking Out of Place asks us to reconceptualize both what we think "politics" is, and our relationship to it. Especially at this historical moment, when it is all too possible we will move from Trump's fascistic regime to Biden's anti-progressive centrism, we need ways to build off the tremendous growth we have seen in democratic socialism, and to gather strength and courage for the challenges, and opportunities that lie ahead.
David Palumbo-Liu is the Louise Hewlett Nixon Professor, and Professor of Comparative Literature, at Stanford University. Besides his academic books on race, culture, ethics and politics, he writes for Jacobin, Truthout, The Nation, the Guardian and other venues.
"Months after the most historic protests in our lifetimes, we continue to confront the same stubborn inequities, crises and catastrophes. This stubborn continuity compels us to reevaluate our common assumptions about the nature of the problem. It compels us to renew our political commitments to change but not necessarily in the same ways that we have before. Most of all, the ongoing suffering and despair in our societies compel us to think anew and creatively for effective, sometimes new and sometimes drawing on the historical ways that ordinary people have confronted the powerful. It compels us to be radical by grabbing hold at the root of our problem--a neoliberal, capitalist world order built on human suffering and abject inequality.
David Palumbo-Liu's Speaking Out of Place is a deeply moral and utterly human meditation on the nature of our despair and the means by which it can be transformed. Most of all, he argues that what is missing is our sense of place, belonging and mutuality that, when intact, showcases our connection and potential for solidarity in our shared struggle for a humane and just world. Here is the exact book we need for the troubled historical moment through which we are living."
--Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, author of From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation "In the face of accelerating fascism and a planet on fire, David Palumbo-Liu provides a road map for finding our political voices by speaking "out of place." This is an urgent call to seize the moment before it's too late."
--Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, author of Not "A Nation of Immigrants," Settler-Colonialism, White Supremacy, and a History of Erasure and Exclusion "It's not enough to be against the rising tide of authoritarianism and climate chaos. David Palumbo-Liu examines how only through "a positive obsession with justice" and a collective willingness to learn to speak a new language and remake the places do we have a chance at saving the planet and building the world we all need."
--Nick Estes, author of Our History is the Future: Standing Rock Versus the Dakota Access Pipeline, and the Long Tradition of Indigenous Resistance "David Palumbo-Liu's Speaking Out of Place is a wake-up call to the twin dangers of fascism and a no-less cruel and ecocidal neoliberalism. Brilliant, clear-eyed, wide-ranging and erudite without being esoteric, this book is a vital assault on the repressive amnesia that obliterates the memory of even our most recent struggles. Palumbo-Liu reminds us that we already have all that we need to reimagine our societies and ourselves, to re-forge the solidarity necessary to get us through such catastrophic times, to make this planet a place where voices clamor outside of the violent control of capital, loudly and freely, alive."
--Ben Ehrenreich, author of Desert Notebooks: A Roadmap for the End of Time and The Way to the Spring: Life and Death in Palestine "Speaking Out of Place is a radical and original reassessment of democratic deliberation and political transformation. Instead of treating "free speech" in simplistic terms, Palumbo-Liu examines the triad of voice, place, and space. This holistic analysis helps us understand who gets heard, where, and why. True democracy, Palumbo-Liu shows, is a raucous polyphony, a chorus emanating from specific communities and contexts and struggles that reverberates widely, unsettling and challenging those accustomed to controlling the terms of the debate."
--Astra Taylor, author of Remake the World