![]() ![]() In Lose Your Mother, Hartman describes this process in detail: “I wanted to engage with the past, knowing that its dangers and dangers were still threatened and that lives hung in the balance even now.”Ī measure of a man and a rating of life and worth that has yet to be undone had been created by Slavery. Hence, through the social structure of society and its citizens, the archive lives on. As seen in historical documents that may or may not exist, Hartman outlines slavery’s imprint on all sectors of society. ![]() ![]() The “afterlife of slavery” can be characterized by the enduring presence of the racialized violence of slavery that is still present in modern society. The ‘afterlife of slavery’ is also theorized by Hartman in Lose Your Mother: A Journey Along the Atlantic Slave Route. ![]()
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