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The Overseer Class : A Manifesto
The Overseer Class : A Manifesto
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Author(s): Thrasher, Steven W.
ISBN No.: 9780063399419
Pages: 240
Year: 202605
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 44.16
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

Steven Thrasher is always a must-read, and not just when he''s writing for Lit Hub! His follow-up to The Viral Underclass looks at what happens when members of minority groups achieve some kind of institutional power and what can happen when those white-supremacist structures are inhabited by the very people they were designed to oppress. Think Black cops, think Clarence Thomas, and get ready to get mad. - LitHub Reading Steven Thrasher''s urgent and incandescent The Overseer Class -- which exposes and explores the myriad instruments and skeletons of multiracial fascism --- reminded me that longing to be as fearless, rigorous, and conscientious as him is like wishing to sing like Stevie or shoot like Steph. Some shit just ain''t possible for everyone. Gonna keep trying, though. - Damon Young, author of What Doesn''t Kill You Makes You Blacker and Winner of the Thurber Prize in American Humor Oppressive systems need us--to do their bidding, repeat their lies, accept their awards, scold their foes, and mask their machinations with our melanin. But what if we refused to oversee exploitation in exchange for proximity, protection, or prestige? From policing to media, universities to corporate boardrooms, government to the military, The Overseer Class reveals how power requires our complicity. By tracing these dynamics, Steven Thrasher invites us to stop tap dancing for self-interested institutions and start sharing risk, cultivating courage, and fighting for the common good.


- Ruha Benjamin, author of Viral Justice and Imagination: A Manifesto The Overseer Class are the gatekeepers, those Black people (and other people of color) who make an agreement with power to do the bidding of white supremacy and to keep the people who "look like them" and to whom they are not responsible, in their place. Where the overseer class are concerned, skinfolk are most definitely not kinfolk and Black faces in high places will be just as, if not more, brutal. Thrasher reminds us that that brutality is a choice. And one could choose otherwise, one could be, in the language of the text, a Toni (Morrison) - a black person who knows that their job is to make something possible for someone else, to see our struggles in Ferguson, Atlanta (cop city) and Gaza, as linked. The Overseer Class: A Manifesto is a call to overthrow the overseers in order to make another kind of world. - Christina Sharpe, author of Ordinary Notes and National Book Award Finalist Steven W. Thrasher''s latest tour de force exposes an inconvenient truth: today''s rising fascism, state violence, campus repression, carceral expansion, and U.S.


-backed war and genocide would not be possible without the rainbow coalition of the willing--better known as the Overseer Class. He tells it like it is and has receipts. A fresh and urgent take on what our enslaved ancestors always knew: the overseer is the master''s first line of defense. - Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination The Overseer Class is one of the most clear-eyed and intellectually serious books I''ve read about how power actually works in contemporary America. With extraordinary range and narrative control, Steven Thrasher weaves history, reportage, and moral argument into a bracing anatomy of how institutions recruit their most effective agents from the very communities they claim to represent--turning the language of progress and inclusion into tools of discipline and control. What makes this book so powerful is not just its anger, but its ethic of solidarity.


Thrasher practices critique as an act of care: a demand that we take responsibility for one another ("We are connected in radical love," as he puts it) rather than hiding behind comforting illusions about representation and reform. He exposes the seductions of liberal power with ferocious clarity, while insisting that another way of being together is possible. This is a beautifully written, morally uncompromising work, one whose unusual authority comes from the fact that Thrasher does not merely theorize these dynamics; he has lived their consequences. The Overseer Class will change how readers understand politics, institutions, and their own complicity within them. - Brian Goldstone, author of There Is No Place For Us: Working and Homeless in America, named one of the Best Books of 2025 by the New York Times, Washington Post, NPR and President Barack Obama.


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