Abstract

AbstractThis article engages with radical Black Power print production in order to examine the articulation of Black practices of place‐making and Black internationalist spatial politics. These spatial politics and practices are developed through engagement with the Jamaican Black Power newspaperAbengwhich was produced at the height of Black Power activity on the island in 1969. The paper draws on Black Geographies scholarship to demonstrate thatAbengrepresented a material and discursive means through which subaltern practices and places of resistance in Jamaica were enacted in opposition to and excess of plantation spatialities and regimes on the island. The carving out of such subaltern places allowed for the articulation of transnational imaginaries and translocal solidarities with similarly aligned communities and struggles across the diasporic world. TheAbengnewspaper was again central in crafting these imagined Black internationalist geographies and coeval praxes of transnational solidarity.

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