Attached Paper In-person November Annual Meeting 2026

Afropessimysticism: Autotheory, Apocalypse, and Apophatic Futurity in Afropessimism

Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)

This essay considers Frank Wilderson’s Afropessimism (2020) as an autotheoretical performance of apophatic faith in a futurity beyond “the end of the World.” While Afropessimism is often implicitly or explicitly conflated with (Black) nihilism as a quietist form of resignation, I argue that its “refusal of prescription” should be read as an apophatic catalyst for tarrying with problems that do not have “solutions.” Echoing Frantz Fanon’s recitation of Aimé Césaire, Afropessimism rhetorically poses the question of where one should “begin” and responds with “the end of the World, of course.” Here, I argue that “beginning” and “ending” contract in(to) the messianic time of the Now, yielding an orientation to the afterlife of slavery and an accompanying eschatology—sans teleology—of interminable abolition. This abolitionist drive concerns not (simply) any given institution or apparatus within the World but rather the Black(est) desire for gratuitous freedom from the Human and the World as such.