Joshua Myers

Cedric Robinson


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      Cedric J. Robinson’s students were a source of grace. I do not take their generosity for granted. I thank H. L. T. Quan for not only agreeing to an interview, but for graciously reading the manuscript and taking time to participate alongside Elizabeth, Robin, and me in a 2020 panel on Cedric that greatly impacted the book. My conversations with Tiffany Willoughby-Herard were deeply insightful. Not only did I find out that she was my South Carolina homegirl, but the care in which she outlined her memories of Cedric and what they mean for now, for the present, and the future of Black Studies will stay with me. Darryl C. Thomas gave me a clear picture of the earlier years and the important time the Robinsons spent in Michigan. I was also able to speak with Bruce Cosby, who took classes with Cedric at Binghamton. And Fred Moten who, though never a formal student of Cedric’s, considered himself in this number as a younger colleague. All of these students and/or mentees are now scholars in their own right, a testament to Cedric’s impact. There are many more whom I must thank, though we did not get a chance to speak about this project formally: Damien Sojoyner, Jordan Camp, Christina Heatherton, Greg Burris, Jonathan D. Gomez, Rovan Locke, Erica Edwards, and Ruth Wilson Gilmore.

      There are a number of scholars, activists, and organizers whom I spoke to about this project. Many of them read drafts, offered encouragements, and gave me directions that are reflected in the final project. These include Ava Wilson, Shauna Morgan, Ashon Crawley, Bedour Alagraa, Imani Perry, Alan Minor, Mario Beatty, Valethia Watkins, Greg Carr, Donna Murch, Chris Roberts, Stefan Bradley, Jesse Benjamin, Minkah Makalani, Baba Lumumba, Anyabwile Love, and Ashanté Reese. Shauna and Ashon read early drafts of the first words of this text and kept me encouraged. Bedour sent me periodic texts that betrayed an authentic and welcome excitement that I was writing this book. I began one of the chapters while sitting next to Ashanté, on a day where I felt stuck and did not feel like writing. By the end of that session, the rest of the book came rather easily. Finally, Greg Carr introduced me to Cedric J. Robinson in 2006. Though it would take several more years for me to actually read this work closely, it was his engagement with that work and its relationship to Africana Studies that started all of this so many years ago.

      Thanks to Polity Press’s George Owers and Julia Davies, who patiently shepherded this project through a very difficult time in human history. Thanks for believing in this project and for developing the Black Lives series.

      A few final words for my friends: B. Nicole Triplett, who was with me when this work was at proposal stage and always provided space on my New York research trips. And to Chigozie Onyema whom I did not talk with a great deal about this project but who, when it comes to radicalism, was one of my first real interlocutors. Alexsandra Mitchell is always there, and when I first took this project on she said she cried. I feel her.