The Repast: Self and Collective Love in the Face of Black Death

H. Cole
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Abstract

Abstract:This essay begins with the idea and practice of the repast or repass as it has come to evolve vernacularly over the years. Traditionally, this practice of community, food, and fellowship, usually partaken after a funeral or burial ceremony, is representative of one's ability and the necessity to continue with life in the face of the realities of death. Attacks on black life have remained a constant, with various manifestations spanning historically from the treacheries of slavery to the social inequities that form the present conditions of marginalized blackness. Racialized disparities in health, as well as the more blatant and growing incidences of police brutality, further evidence the complex proximity of black life and death. This essay argues that articulations of self and collective black love and resilience underscore the practice and meaning of the repast for black communities and also represent an important mechanism for black mental, emotional, and ultimately physical survival. Moreover, I argue that black communities are constantly participating in the repast where, in the midst of death, there is an attempt to continue to nurture and care take for oneself and others. In this way, the repast becomes a statement/metaphor for the black condition. This article also includes a critical examination of the roles of "mothering" and "motherwork" that serve as important anchors within processes of black collective love.
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《晚餐:面对黑死病的自我与集体之爱
摘要:本文从多年来在方言中演变的就餐或重传的概念和实践开始。传统上,这种社区、食物和友谊的做法通常在葬礼或葬礼仪式之后进行,代表了一个人在面对死亡的现实时继续生活的能力和必要性。对黑人生活的攻击一直是一种常态,从历史上对奴隶制的背叛到形成黑人边缘化现状的社会不平等,其表现形式多种多样。健康方面的种族差异,以及越来越明显和日益增加的警察暴力事件,进一步证明了黑人生命和死亡的复杂接近。本文认为,自我和集体黑人的爱和韧性的表达强调了黑人社区的实践和意义,也代表了黑人精神、情感和最终身体生存的重要机制。此外,我认为黑人社区不断地参与到这场盛宴中,在死亡之中,他们试图继续养育和照顾自己和他人。通过这种方式,餐点成为了对黑人状况的陈述/隐喻。本文还包括对“母性”和“母性工作”的角色的批判性检查,这些角色在黑人集体爱的过程中起着重要的锚作用。
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