Later in 2021, look out for the teaching companion, an anthology, encompassing 104 works by ninety-two different thinkers, co-edited with @leverhulmewhit, @KatHistory, @sarahcdunstan, Kimberly Hutchings.
The volume will demonstrate women’s centrality to early international relations discourses in and on the Anglo-American world order and how they were excluded from its history and conceptualization...
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This is the first of a series of threads on chapters in our new volume - Vivian M. May’s essay on Anna Julia Cooper’s analysis of imperialism and colonialism in the Age of Revolutions. 1/9
Cooper’s thought is a rich resource for countering the active erasure of Black women’s writings on international relations, and Mays' essay invites readers to theorize with Cooper, not just about her. 2/9
Confronting the absences and silences she encountered when working in French colonial archives in
the 1920s, Cooper developed a methodology for recovering the voices of marginalized people of color in the French Empire. 3/9