We Refuse: A Forceful History of Black Resistance
by Kellie Carter Jackson
Seal Press, 2024
[Publication date: June 4, 2024]
REVIEWS:
“Enthralling…A
fascinating array of histories that highlight the ingeniousness,
efficacy, and relatability of Black political maneuvering across several
centuries of oppression…By astutely delineating how Black resistance
strategies have always existed on a spectrum between the binary of
nonviolence vs. violence, Carter Jackson demolishes an unnecessarily
rigid distinction. The result is an invigorating paradigm shift.”―Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Urgent [and] uncompromising.”―Kirkus (starred review)
“Urgent [and] uncompromising.”―Kirkus (starred review)
“Unsparing, erudite, and incisive, We Refuse is an insurgent history. Kellie Carter Jackson has produced a book that is every bit as urgent as the subject matter she so brilliantly writes about.”―Jelani Cobb, coeditor of The Matter of Black Lives
“Kellie Carter Jackson is fearless. She is not afraid to tell you want she thinks, share what she knows, or challenge prevailing wisdom. We Refuse is proof. She taps the wellsprings of memory, archives, oral histories, literature, imagination, and personal experience to tell a very Black story of armed resistance, strategic retreat, unbreakable resolve, and joyous rapture. Reading this book will cause discomfort in some folks, provoke cheers in others. But I doubt anyone will be able to put it down.”―Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Freedom Dreams
“What does it mean to use violence as a means of resistance? How has violent resistance shaped Black radical freedom movements, despite the popular notion that peaceful pleas for humanity or moderate negotiations with white supremacist oppression are the only path to racial justice? In We Refuse, Kellie Carter Jackson provides a cogent, provocative, and ultimately inspiring re-evaluation of how violence—in all its forms—has been used by Black people to resist slavery and its afterlives. Both radical history and racial reckoning, this book is sure to become a canonical text. Through extensive research and brilliant analysis of Black communities and our politics, We Refuse is a timely re-writing of the African American past, one that forces us to reframe our discussion of our beloved civil rights icons, our assumptions about our politics, and our collective understanding of what it means to resist.”―Kerri K. Greenidge, author of The Grimkes
“From one of our generation’s most exciting historians, We Refuse changes the way we understand the contours and legacy of the Black freedom struggle. Blending fierce analysis with touching personal vignettes, Kellie Carter Jackson’s essential new book enhances the most pressing debates of our time and will stay with readers long after they finish.”―Elizabeth Hinton, author of America on Fire
“Kellie Carter Jackson tells a nuanced and textured story about how African Americans, over many centuries, have refused racism by any means necessary. Her book thoughtfully reveals that nonviolence is just one of the many strategies Black people have used to assert their humanity and achieve full equality in this country. It is a must-read for all of us committed to understanding and, hopefully, joining the long freedom struggle.”―Salamishah Tillet, Pulitzer Prize–winning critic
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Kellie Carter Jackson is the Michael and Denise Kellen ’68 Associate Professor and Chair of Africana Studies at Wellesley College. Her book Force and Freedom
was a finalist for the Frederick Douglass Book Prize and the Museum of
African American History Stone Book Award. She is the cohost of the
Radiotopia podcast “This Day in Esoteric Political History.” She lives
outside of Boston with her husband and three children.