Description
Description
Essential radical texts by enslaved, jailed, and imprisoned Americans, edited by renowned political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal and activist-scholar Jennifer Black.
"Martin Luther King told us what he saw when he went to the mountaintop....But there's also the foot of the mountain, and there are also the regions beneath the surface. I want to try to tell you a little something about those regions."--Angela Y. Davis, author of Angela Davis: An Autobiography
Beneath the Mountain is a reader's guide for understanding the evolution of anti-prison tenets. This essential core of primary texts provides an arc of insurgent writings by dissidents and revolutionaries who experienced incarceration and state terror first-hand. With contributions from John Brown, Frederick Douglass, and Crazy Horse, to Assata Shakur, Malcolm X, and Leonard Peltier, it also includes a previously unpublished communiqué from Angela Davis, written from jail at the time when she was forging the anti-prison critique that has since inspired a national movement.
Beneath the Mountain offers a record of the historic foundations for the contemporary abolition movement. What emerges from these texts is an emancipatory vision that inspires the work being done today, a vision centered on organizing and solidarity as an antidote to repression. An invaluable resource for readers on both sides of prison walls, this compendium of resistance and hard-won vision will be essential to all who seek to develop an abolitionist critique and to further an understanding of the nature of repression and liberation.
About the Author
About the Author
Jennifer Black holds a PhD in Comparative Studies from The Ohio State University where she taught for 12 years. Her research focuses on high-risk activism, state terror, criminal injustice, mass incarceration, and social movement theory. Black hails from a background in both academia and activism and has been collaborating on these two fronts with Abu-Jamal since 1993. She is based in State College, PA.
Critical Reviews
Critical Reviews
Praise for Beneath the Mountain:
"The book is one-of-a-kind . . . stunning and impeccably curated . . . gleaned directly from the pens of rebels who have worked toward liberation from the bowels of the U.S. prison system."--Robyn Maynard, co-author of Rehearsals for Living
"Like America's dungeons, this book is full of caged freedom fighters, unfree radicals, and outlaw intellectuals, whose words, smuggled from behind prison bars and cages, offer a beautiful literary anti-canon of liberation."--David Correia, author of Violent Order: Essays on the Nature of Police
"This collection gives a compelling sense of insurgent spirits and critical minds enduring imprisonment and even facing death at the hands of powerful oppressors. These contributions have much to tell us about past and present realities that must be confronted. Mumia Abu-Jamal and Jennifer Black must be thanked for this precious gift--an inspiring resource for activists, scholars, and all who care about social justice and human rights."--Paul Le Blanc, editor of Black Liberation and the American Dream
"Who stands beneath the mountain but prisoners of war? Mumia Abu-Jamal and Jennifer Black have assembled a book of fire, each voice a flame in captivity shedding light on what John Brown called "a most barbarous, unprovoked, and unjustifiable war," and illuminating a path to freedom. Whether writing from a place of fugitivity, the prison camp, the city jail, the modern gulag, or death row, these are our revolutionary thinkers, our critics and dreamers, our people. The people who move mountains."--Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination
"This collection is an irruption of state captivity in all its forms. Gathering the voices of unapologetic revolutionaries, abolitionists, anti-imperialists, and militant resisters, Beneath the Mountain echoes an archive of something else after the mountain has crumbled at the feet of those who dare to do what it takes to find liberation."--Dylan Rodriguez, author of White Reconstruction: Domestic Warfare and the Logics of Genocide, winner of the 2022 Frantz Fanon Book Award
"Beneath the Mountain reminds us that ancestors and rebels have resisted conquest and enslavement, building marronage against colonialism and genocide."--Joy James, author of New Bones Abolition: Captive Maternal Agency and the (After)Life of Erica Garner
"Beneath the Mountain salutes generations of revolutionaries from around the world as a wonderful example of what Frantz Fanon once called "combat literature." The uncompromising and bold voices in this collection speak to us, crafting a "we" with their clarity of thought, fearlessness, and determination. They invite us, teach us, challenge us, enlist us; they embolden and empower us. These are the voices of those defined not by their captivity but by their refusal to submit to oppression and their commitment to freedom. Their words resound across the many decades of struggle. They traverse space, overcoming its carceral partitioning with barbed wires, thick walls, and militarized borders. They advance our quest for dignity and collective liberation."--Banu Bargu, author of Starve and Immolate: The Politics of Human Weapons
Publishing Information
Publishing Information

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