Norman Ajari is a lecturer in Francophone Black Studies at the University of Edinburgh.
“Norman Ajari’s Darkening Blackness is a masterful defense of Afro-American pessimism and Black Male Studies against the misguided view that ‘pessimism’ means hopelessness and eternal defeat. Instead, pessimism is treated as meaning the rejection of fantasies, especially the fantasy that says one more revision will alter insidious white racialized civil society and intrinsically unjust Euro/American institutions. Step into Ajari’s theoretical world and step out unburdened by fantasy.” Leonard Harris, Purdue University “For those who still do not understand that the pessimism in Afropessimism is not an emotional dispensation but a meta-critique of the first principles of Western thought, Norman Ajari’s Darkening Blackness is required reading. His analysis of Black Male Studies will have as many people nodding their heads as shaking their heads, which is the first step toward rigorous and honest debate.” Frank B. Wilderson III, Chancellor’s Professor of African American Studies, University of California, Irvine “an empirically informed and theoretically provocative explanation of the ontological negation that characterizes the Black social condition. Beyond the boundaries of the dominant rubrics of race-gender theory, Ajari's penetrating analysis culminates in the articulation of a normative commitment to Black Autonomy (Pan-Africanism) that has the potential to trigger a creative pinnacle in Black thought centered on the notion of self-defense.’’ Miron J. Clay-Gilmore, Ethnic and Racial Studies Journal “By presenting the Black Radical tradition and putting the emphasis on Afro-American pessimism and Black Male Studies from a Pan-African perspective, this book does much more than describe these theories but gives an understanding of the Black Radical tradition from the perspective of its negativity, taken as a power.’’ Charles des Portes, Ethnic and Racial Studies Journal