Arguing for the renewal of emancipatory universalism, L�ger makes an unsparing critique of woke aesthetics and black capitalism, drawing the connections between today's racialist agenda and the ideology of post-representation.
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Arguing for the renewal of emancipatory universalism, L�ger makes an unsparing critique of woke aesthetics and black capitalism, drawing the connections between today's racialist agenda and the ideology of post-representation.
Read Less