karl bühler digital

Home > Book Series > Edited Book > Contribution

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2000

Pages: 169-187

Series: Contributions to Phenomenology

ISBN (Hardback): 9789048153961

Full citation:

Robert Bernasconi, "The invisibility of racial minorities in the public realm of appearances", in: Phenomenology of the political, Berlin, Springer, 2000

The invisibility of racial minorities in the public realm of appearances

Robert Bernasconi

pp. 169-187

in: Kevin Thompson, Lester Embree (eds), Phenomenology of the political, Berlin, Springer, 2000

Abstract

During the strike that preceded the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., the sanitation workers of Memphis and their African-American supporters paraded with posters that read, "I AM A MAN." This was not only a labor dispute in which the right of public employees to strike against a city was in question, but it was also, given the historical context and especially the racial identity of most of the sanitation workers, immediately recognized as an important chapter in the Civil Rights Movement. There were signs that read "JOBS JOBS JOBS," "UNIONIZATION FOR THE SANITATION WORKERS," and "JUSTICE AND EQUALITY FOR ALL MEN." But most signs read simply "I AM A MAN," and the photographs of scores of Black protesters holding these signs provide the abiding image of the strike. They wanted economic justice and recognition of their union, but contemporary accounts record that more than anything else they wanted to be "recognized" for themselves.1

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2000

Pages: 169-187

Series: Contributions to Phenomenology

ISBN (Hardback): 9789048153961

Full citation:

Robert Bernasconi, "The invisibility of racial minorities in the public realm of appearances", in: Phenomenology of the political, Berlin, Springer, 2000