Another Love: A Politics of the Unrequited
By (Author) Asma Abbas
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
15th October 2018
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Politics and government
Literature: history and criticism
128.46
Hardback
242
Width 158mm, Height 230mm, Spine 25mm
531g
In a time when our loves feel conscripted and exhausted by what we often do not remember desiring, Another Love: A Politics of the Unrequited explores the form, method, imperatives, and inflections of love in the global post colony, and offers a way to re-apprehend and re-inscribe love in an anticolonial, materialist, and nonfascist politics and aesthetics. The figure of the unrequited is invoked as a symptom of a brutally loveless yet effusively sentimentalized era, and also as an ineluctable yet very concrete political location in the face of both the intensifying external realities of war, occupation, apartheid, austerity, and terror, as well as the increasingly normalized internalizations of ordinary imperialism, nationalism, neoliberalism, fascism, and colonialismall of which seem bent on extinguishing the possibility of relation itself. The book asks that we look at practices of love and other material labors that yield and sustain these realities within complex lifeworlds; indeed, those which sustain entire systems of our subjection, extraction, and disposabilitysuch as colonialism, capitalism, liberalism, and fascismas lifeworlds, especially when given, dominant, forms of recognition, affection, embrace, and belonging are unacceptable or even repulsive. Distancing itself from shortcuts afforded by loves abstract forms deployed in ethical and moral discourses that at once elevate it yet wholly reduce it to a timeless, apolitical, essence, Another Love sees love as a material and political relation to time and space, signaling willed and unwilled shifts in historical reality in societies juggling various wars and annihilations. It maintains that love is something in and with which we confess our complicities not only with but also against hegemonic notions of belonging, devotion, martyrdom, hospitality, publicity, collectivity, and solidarity nurtured and harvested under capital and colony. The longing and the lovemissed by the pernicious and reactionary politics both of liberal democracy and the incidental fascisms that it claims to set out to fixcan give us clues into past, present, and future, moments of rebellion, resistance, rejection, and redemption that are crucial to a liberatory, anticolonial, and antifascist politic, and to rethinking attachment, desire, and relation itself.
This book is overflowing with tears and besos, a cascade of longing and desire. Asma Abbas is a dil phaink: she throws her heart into the world and it opens the way for her mind and ours. This is a work of generous courage and greatness of soul. -- Anne Norton, University of Pennsylvania
This erudite, beautifully written book brings together how love and terror constitute an ironic coupling through which political nihilism faces the inexplicable power of hearts thrown into the world of commitment and deed. There is no loveas, too, there is no politicswithout risk. Asma Abbas has thus offered us a steady stream of wisdom in this work whose gifts transcend the last page turned. -- Lewis R. Gordon, Honorary President of the Global Center for Advanced Studies and author of Fear of a Black Consciousness
Abbas has produced a masterpiece of another love! A timely love letter to the seeker to look inward and sideways for another love. The text embodies the anticolonial politics of the unrequited. Its an unapologetically bold plea directly to you, to all of us, to own up to the empires terror that tethers itself to a certain love that is necropolitical. Abbass writing carries a deep and more intimate connection with the reader showing that unrequited politics is never interrupted by distance nor by time. . . . A deeply serious, urgent book, which should take its place in anticolonial/decolonial aesthetics! -- Anna M. Agathangelou, York University, Toronto
Asma Abbas is associate professor of politics and philosophy at Bard College at Simon's Rock.