1st Edition

Keeping Good Time Reflections on Knowledge, Power and People

By Avery Gordon, Angela Davis Copyright 2004
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    Avery Gordon's first book, Ghostly Matters, was widely acclaimed as a work of striking sociological imagination and social theory. Keeping Good Time, her much anticipated second book, brings together essays by Gordon that were "written to be read aloud." Her eloquent voice in this book further establishes her place among literary sociological writers of a new generation. Keeping Good Time will be of great interest to activists, feminists, sociologists, students and everyone concerned about how to beat the odds in influencing the shape of social and culture change. Readers will find their thinking changed by the author's perennial quest to "develop insights gained in confrontation with injustice."

    EDUCATION DURING WAR TIME. War-time Research: The Front Lines. War Machines and Washing Machines. On Education During War Time. War on Iraq? FACE UP TO WHAT'S KILLING YOU. Going Inside: The Prison Research Visit. We the People. Globalism and the prison industrial complex: an interview with Angela Davis. Face up to What's Killing You: Fear and the Prison Industrial Complex. A love story. MAKING A DIFFERENCE. Alternative Graduation. Sociology After Deconstruction. Twenty-Two Theses on Social Constructionism. Theory and Justice. Sociology After the Crisis. Making a Difference: Women's Studies in the Academy. Theses on Teaching Marx. Some thoughts on the utopian. An Anthropology of Marxism. NO ALIBIS. State of the Art. Will this Election Matter? Corporate Multiculturalism. More on Positive and Negative Images: The Case of Kara Walker, Artist. The Sledgehammer and the Dagger: A Conversation between Leon Golub and Avery Gordon. Wish upon a star. No Alibis: A Community Radio Collaboration. Something more powerful than skepticism. Exercised.

    Biography

    Avery Gordon, Angela Davis

    "Keeping Good Time is a politically engaged meditation in the truest, deepest sense. In these trenchant essays, Avery Gordon rigorously excavates the nature of the historical present, even as she commits herself to the enormous project of imagining the languages necessary to realize an entirely different future.... She looks to the subjugated knowledges of the world's ragged and excluded as well as to the utopian arts of our culture's storytellers.... This book should be read by all who long for a more just world in which constant warfare, manufactured fear, and pervasive forms of human imprisonment would be unnecessary."
    Janice Radway, Duke University

    "In these graceful essays written to be read aloud, Avery Gordon lays down a simple provocation: take sides. Keeping Good Time helps us be partisan, by charting examples where we can find "in confrontations with injustice precisely the diagnostic insights and the imaginative means to render society adequate to human life."
    Ruthie Gilmore, University of Southern California and the California Prison Moratorium Project