Está en la página 1de 4

The A!

ective Work of Blackness: On the Value of Black Labor for the White Imagination
1
The A!ective Work of Blackness: On
the Value of Black Labor for the White
Imagination
Cliven Bundy's ranting on race has been pretty widely shared now and he's been pretty roundly de-
nounced as a "nut job" by all the right white people.
But instead of doing the work of distancing him from us even more, I wanted to think about the
ways his statements belie an intimacy or entanglement that we're best not to ignore. I want to elabo-
rate how his words and behavior depend on the affective labor that blackness performs. By affective
labor, I simply mean how the gure of blackness is used to conjure up certain affective responses,
strengthen social bonds, or ideas and imaginations that bolster white subjectivity and capitalistic no-
tions of property, accumulation, and wealth.
Bundy starts by playing the role of the conjurer. He wants to tell us "one more thing about the Ne-
gro," as if he is a seer with secret information on black life, inviting us to step a bit closer and listen as
he deepens our knowledge of the black. But instead of a revelation about black life, this moment turns
into a revelation about white supremacist imagination and it's chronic forgetfulness.

in front of that government house the door was usually open and the older people and the kids - and there is always
at least a half a dozen people sitting on the porch - they didn't have nothing to do. They didn't have nothing for
their kids to do. They didn't have nothing for their young girls to do.
And because they were basically on government subsidy, so now what do they do?" he asked. "They abort their
young children, they put their young men in jail, because they never learned how to pick cotton. And I've often
wondered, are they better off as slaves, picking cotton and having a family life and doing things, or are they better
off under government subsidy? They didn't get no more freedom. They got less freedom.

Here I want to note that for the white imagination, there is no interiority to blackness. All Bundy
needs to know about blackness, he can surmise from black exteriority. This is an instance of what
Karen and Barbara Fields call "racecraft," whereby the practice of racism performs a sleight of hand
that locates the offense in the blackness of the skin (or the blackness of the biology) instead of the
force and violence of the law that positions blackness as always already in transgression of the law.
Playing on the word and ideas behind witchcraft, the Fields' note how out in our current imagination,
the ideas people used to legitimate witchcraft seem utterly ridiculous, yet they deployed them as rea-
sonable just the same and were able to pass laws, create religious doctrines, take land, murder, etc., be-
cause of these notions of witchcraft. Similarly, racecraft performs the same kind of ludicrous work, but
The A!ective Work of Blackness: On the Value of Black Labor for the White Imagination
2
is still active in our imaginations, so that the kinds of associations Bundy makes between blackness and
abjection, blackness and a (lack of) labor, etc., are made all the time without a thought.
Here, Bundy assuredly works his racecraft as if he's performing a task as natural as rounding up
cattle: he sets the scene of abjection (the projects); he lays out the players (black adults and kids with
nothing to do); and, he works his magic. For, it is the people aficted by blackness who are made to be
morally culpable in his logic: " They abort their young children, they put their young men in jail, be-
cause they never learned how to pick cotton." Indeed, the failings of civil society are made coterminous
with a lack of black moral and personal responsibility. The magic trick is complete, now. With every-
one focused on Bundy pondering whether blacks are better off than they were in slavery, the magic
he's performing, mixing blackness and some American mythology to conjure the rightness of his own
entitlementhis own subjectivitygoes unnoticed.
The Limits of Liberty
Liberty and labor go hand in hand here in the land of the free. They go hand in hand, all over the
country, plucking up rights to land and accumulating wealth along the way.
That this liberty and labor might depend on the shackled labor of another never crosses the mind of
the constitutionalist, or the liberal democrat, or the conservative republican. That liberty is the prob-
lem and not the solution is not an idea you'll nd argued on Meet the Press, or Up with Chris Hayes,
or Morning Joe, or maybe even the Melissa Harris-Perry show. But it's not a liberty that is available
for blackness because all along it's been built as a wall between citizenship and blacknessblackness
being the limit to how far citizenship and its rights and entitlements can extend.
Yet all around we go on perpetuating this notion that what America values more than anything is,
to quote our president, If you work hard, you can make it in America and thats the chance we have in
this country. But the chance at liberty has always been a risky gamble for black folks, who know liber-
ty was invented with a cofe and a violence. The inherent value in hard work that American's keep re-
peating can't be true with it's shoddy history of fairly compensating those who are doing the hardest
work and it's complete lack of ability to provide redress for past grievances, whether that be stolen
land, uncompensated labor, or being the objects of undue violence. Thus, It is not a degraded work
ethic that keeps those black folks congregating on the porch with "nothing to do nothing for their
kids to do nothing for their young girls to do." It is the recognition that the ethic of work in this
country is far from ethical and will be as long as it depends on making blackness depraved.
1

Putting Blackness to Work
Mistaking the exteriority of black suffering for moral failings is common in the white imagination. It's
also one of the ideas about blackness that is sedimented in white American Christianity. Where being a
Christian becomes synonymous, not with following Christ, but with following the market. Instead of
1
The refusal of labor here, which through a white supremacist capitalist patriarchal lens (because we must note how he singles out the
young girls as having nothing to do) looks like laziness and abjection, is actually a site of black sociality. That is, rather than laboring, striving
to produce an illusion of rights to land or wealth, they are laboring to accumulate blackness and share it amongst each other.
The A!ective Work of Blackness: On the Value of Black Labor for the White Imagination
3
creating disciples, then, one must create laborers. The work of the gospel is converting bad laborers
into good ones for the sake of the market. There is an accumulation here, not just of capital and
wealth, but of laboring bodies and space within which those bodies are put to work. The spread of the
gospel is the spread of productive spaces, spaces where there is no congregating on the porch "doing
nothing" because there is some work to be done.
It's no surprise, then, that particularly Christian takes on startups, uncritical calls for sharing
economies, and localism in urban environments are gaining such purchase in young white imaginations
as the ways in which justice ought to be pursued. This is because, in white Christian imagination, jus-
tice is tied to redemption and the urban environment, especially the "inner-city" (which is code for
places where black people live), is always a place to be redeemed in the white Christian imagination.
Making the work of the gospel about justice is actually part and parcel of the work of redeeming the
abject. Thus, land that holds black bodies congregating becomes fallow, and needs to be put to work
for another purpose which is the accumulation of wealth, and an education in the virtue of labor.
A video I came across recently depicted the kind of unthinking logic that what black people in
poverty most need is white patriarchal guidance and an education in labor. The founder of the skate-
board company startup is also tied to a church that might as well be called a startup.
[http://vimeo.com/78505087]
What was so fascinating to me about this, is the narrative that what's wrong with this neighborhood
is a lack of fathers and a lack of labor. Indeed, the ways fatherhood is tied to inheritance and the accu-
mulation of wealth is foundational to the founder's idea of what justice looks like. That his own father
owns a woodshop an hour outside of Nashville and the historical means by which this land and wood-
shop were acquired can't, of course, be brought into question. And of course, this relationship of the
father passing on his inheritance is caught up in ideas of God, the heavenly father, who bestows wealth
on his obedient children.
1

Here we see that access to wealth and wealth creation is often dependent on access to land. And, in
light of the systematic disposession of black and indigenous and asian American's, these ideas of re-
deeming the "inner-city" depend on erasing the work "redemption" has already been doing on black
neighborhoods and communities. The cycle of disinvestment from black neighborhoods followed by
their reinvestment as a way of displacing black people isn't new and is tied to these notions of the lack
of work ethic. What these spaces need, it is proposed, is to be put to work, never thinking about why
they weren't working in the rst place except to the extent the failure to work can be posited as a
moral failure.
But we know the idea of black father's being absent is a myth
2
, that proposing marriage and more
work as the solutions to what ails black people is to ignore that those are what have plagued black peo-
ple for centuries.
3
That is, the accumulation of wealth and property through marriage for white people
has never worked for blacks in the same way, and that is intentional.
4

1
I'm actually intending to write about whiteness, Christian imperialism & coloniality, and prosperity gospels soon.
2
http://thinkprogress.org/health/2014/01/16/3175831/myth-absent-black-father/
3
http://thefeministwire.com/2012/05/beyond-the-access-narrative-marriage-politics-austerity-surveillance/
4
http://trustest.jotwell.com/the-impact-of-race-and-inherited-wealth-on-social-mobility/
The A!ective Work of Blackness: On the Value of Black Labor for the White Imagination
4
It is rather ironic, then, that people (especially white and middle class people) persist in positing an
inux of white people with middle class ideals about labor, liberty, and morality as what will save poor
black people from themselves. Indeed, no one ever wonders at negative effects of such an education.
That we may not want the Christian/capitalist-driven ideals these missionaries to the "inner-
city" (which we might as well call them) are hoping will rub off on black people.
None of these white seers like Bundy or Henley, who have such clear insight into what plagues
black communities, ever argues that the problem with black folks is that they have been over-educated
in capitalist accumulation (though they will argue that blacks are too materialistic, to which I would
respond, "so their capitalists? Isn't that what you want?"). We don't get treatises from these white mis-
sionaries proclaiming that what has been degrading black communities, black sociality, black life, is a
systematic prevention of black generational wealth through the legal apparatus.
This notion that we need to educate black people in the way of capital misses the fact that this edu-
cation in capitalistic accumulation is precisely what America's project has always been and extreme
black poverty under the guise of progressing freedoms is where it has brought us to, or rather, where it
has stayed.
In this country, when black people's lives have been most protable for ourselves (rather than for a
white plantation owner, or corporationwhich is a bit redundant, since the two are so similaror for
a white nation-state that prots on black misery) has been when we are "doing nothing" together.
When we steal away to do "nothing" like plotting escapes together. When we hide in a crawl space for
years to do "nothing" like refusing the sexual violence of slavery. When we do "nothing" together like
congregating on a porch as a Black Panther Party for Self-Defense, defending our right to do "noth-
ing". When we do "nothing" like sitting in a segregated restaurant as the shaking jowls and violent
threats of some white folks signals the ability of this "nothing" to outrage and disrupt the "something"
that capital was putting to work in those white businesses.
When black people get together and work "nothing," shaping it into some kind of critical material
that resists being put to work by white supremacist capitalist patriarchythis is when we are the
greatest threat to the political economy of misery.
1

And this critical labordoing "nothing" togetheris precisely why white supremacy wants to put
us to work.
1
As Emilie Townes would call it.

También podría gustarte