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192 pages, Paperback
First published October 1, 1997
the black body in particular is seen as paradigmatically _a body_. Lewis Gordon suggests that the black "presence is a form of absence.... Every black person becomes a limb of an enormous black body: THE BLACK BODY". Whites may get to be "talking heads," but even when blacks' heads are talking, one is always uncomfortably aware of the bodies to which these heads are attached. (So blacks are at best "talking bodies.")
How were people able consistently to do the wrong thing while thinking that they were doing the right thing? In part, it is a problem of cognition and of white moral cognitive dysfunction