“Thompson’s new book focuses on major figures such as Baraka, Baldwin, Cleaver, and Davis with an admirable rigor, even austerity, that ignores the polemics and moralizing judgments that often simplify each of their reputations, the better to show the unfolding of their ideas and thinking in a new context: postwar German political thought. This demanding book is worth the reader’s effort because it yields remarkable and fresh insights as it fulfills its goal ‘to relate the brilliance of their thought in full awareness of its flaws.’”
— Ross Posnock, Columbia University
“Phenomenal Blackness is a text long awaited by many Black scholars—and essential to all of us—seeking to understand the complex origins of postwar Black cultural and aesthetic thought. Thompson’s deep and holistic dive into an entangled and phenomenal Blackness gives us back an intellectual history well-nigh lost.”
— Michelle M. Wright, Emory University
"An important and provocative intervention. . . . What is most exciting about Thomson’s book is that his intellectual history makes it possible for us to better understand contemporary trends in Black philosophy and aesthetics. Scholars such as Hortense Spillers, Fred Moten, Saidiya Hartman, Christina Sharpe, Frank Wilderson, and Jared Sexton seem to be inheritors and innovators of the tradition set forth by the African-American thinkers Thompson discusses."
— Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
"Mark Christian Thompson’s Phenomenal Blackness: Black Power, Philosophy, and Theory is a powerful exploration of the development of a critical literary theory that is able to properly theorize Blackness in the middle decades of the twentieth century."
— Critical Inquiry
In Phenomenal Blackness: Black Power, Philosophy, and Theory, Mark Christian Thompson guides readers through a genealogical account of Black Power thought of the late 1960s, focusing in particular on the influence of German philosophy . . . Phenomenal Blackness will be of interest to scholars and historians of African American studies as a discipline, social theorists in general, and of course, scholars of Critical Theory, Black Power intellectual history, and the Frankfurt School. Thompson has shed light on a rich intellectual exchange that has hitherto been overlooked, and readers will surely be curious to see future work on the topic."
— Monatshefte
"This book is an intellectual and literary history of Black Power thought in the mid-20th century. Thompson is particularly skilled at drawing out and examining the articulations of Blackness in the thought of these authors."
— American Journal of Sociology