Tip of the Spear: Black Radicalism, Prison Repression, and the Long Attica Revolt

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Product Details
Price
$29.95
Publisher
University of California Press
Publish Date
Pages
328
Dimensions
5.9 X 8.9 X 1.0 inches | 0.97 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780520396326

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About the Author
Orisanmi Burton is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at American University.
Reviews
"Magnificent. . . . Tip of the Spear is a massive accomplishment of scholarship and political analysis."-- "Propaganda in Focus"
"A fresh and urgent interpretation of the meaning of Attica. . . . Burton has crafted a masterpiece that, as much as any single book can, shows the way forward for a new generation of activist-scholars, agitators, revolutionaries, and other partisans of human liberation, to redeem the dead and build a new society in their name."-- "Los Angeles Review of Books"
"Not only is Tip of the Spear an important addition to the growing volume of literature regarding the role of prisons in the racist capitalist state that is the United States, the thesis of the text represents a major evolution in the historical representation of US prisons."-- "CounterPunch"
"A remarkable account of how prison repression and reform intertwine, one that poses fundamental dilemmas about whether our legal system can ever properly serve movements for social change. It is a book that will unsettle and enrage you. It should also become the account of Attica that every interested person reads."-- "Inquest"
"Burton gives readers a deeply-felt look at the activists who participated in these revolts. . . . His interviews with survivors are incisive and reflect an appreciation of the political knowledge and passion that led these men to foment rebellion, however risky."-- "The Progressive"
"With Tip of the Spear, Burton hasn't just salvaged the imprisoned Black radical tradition from the condescension of liberal posterity, but provided a singular lesson in militant intellectual method, shedding stark illumination on the counterinsurgent genealogy of prison reform (between philanthropy and psyops) while doing justice to an abolitionist horizon oriented toward maximum demands rather than piecemeal adaptations."-- "Verso Author Pick"
"Not only is Tip of the Spear an important addition to the growing volume of literature regarding the role of prisons in the racist capitalist state that is the US, the thesis of the text represents a major evolution in the historical representation of US prisons."-- "The Morning Star"
"Tip of the Spear imagines an abolitionist ethic of horizontal possibility and proposes the radical demand that we make meaning together."-- "Public Books"
"This book is essential material for undergraduate and graduate courses not only in anthropology, but in a range of disciplines drawing from Black radical theory, abolition and critical prison studies, archives of war and counter-insurgency, masculinity and gender studies, geography, sociology, and the history of social movements in the United States. This is a deep work, rigorously engaging with archives that have historically been dismissed, overlooked, or repressed. It is also beautifully written, inviting us into the worldmaking of Attica."-- "Medical Anthropology Quarterly"
"Meticulously researched and fascinating. . . . By placing the prison struggle as part of a domestic war, this book makes an enormous contribution to efforts to fight against prison expansion and for true abolition."-- "Against the Current"
"Burton's book gives readers a new conceptual language, a new framework, and a new orientation for any future research on Black radical consciousness, carcerality, and abolition. It will change the fields of critical carceral studies and counterinsurgency and will give new direction to the anthropology of Black masculinity and prisons as sites of warfare."-- "Current Anthropology"
"A model of committed historical and ethnographic scholarship, Burton has produced an analysis of revolution and counter-insurgency in the crucible of racialized class war that is the prison while also leaving us with a methodology for rigorous, principled work that foregrounds the knowledge and experiences of the people whose potential to be the protagonists of history is precisely the reason for their captivity. In this way, Burton has essentially succeeded in writing a book that is both excavation of the past and blueprint for how to read present and future struggles."-- "Crime Media Culture"