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Resistance and Multiplicity: Insurrectionist Ethics and Afro-Indigenous Acts of Solidarity

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Insurrectionist Ethics

Part of the book series: African American Philosophy and the African Diaspora ((AAPAD))

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Abstract

Taking its direction from references to Black and Indigenous struggles present in Leonard Harris’ oeuvre, this chapter turns to politicized acts of resistance among Black and Indigenous communities. More specifically, the essay traces the functions of cultural pluralism, value relativism, and representative heuristics within solidarity work that enact logics of resistance to settler colonization and anti-Black racism, among other forms of oppression. Through this analysis, we see that Harris’ views about insurrection and normativity entail that both oppression and resistance are the result of multiplicitous forms of agency.

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Correspondence to Andrea J. Pitts .

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Pitts, A.J. (2023). Resistance and Multiplicity: Insurrectionist Ethics and Afro-Indigenous Acts of Solidarity. In: Carter, J.A., Scriven, D. (eds) Insurrectionist Ethics. African American Philosophy and the African Diaspora. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-16741-6_6

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