Excited Delirium Book Tour

Sept. 4, 2024

Aisha M. Beliso-De Jesús (Co-Director, CTP; Chair, Effron Center) will discuss her new book, Excited Delirium: Race, Police Violence, and the Invention of a Disease, at book events across the US this fall, in Minneapolis, San Francisco, Princeton, Brooklyn, D.C., and Philadelphia, with amazing interlocutors Michael Walker, Tianna Paschel, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Elizabeth Hinton, Derecka Purnell, and Eddie Glaude, Jr.! 

“In 1980, Charles Wetli—a Miami-based medical examiner and self-proclaimed ‘cult expert’ of Afro-Caribbean religions—identified what he called ‘excited delirium syndrome.’ Soon, medical examiners began using the syndrome regularly to describe the deaths of Black men and women during interactions with police. Police and medical examiners claimed that Black people with so-called excited delirium exhibited superhuman strength induced from narcotics abuse. It was fatal heart failure that killed them, examiners said, not forceful police restraints. In Excited Delirium: Race, Police Violence, and the Invention of a Disease, Aisha M. Beliso-De Jesús examines this fabricated medical diagnosis and its use to justify and erase police violence against Black and Brown communities. Exposing excited delirium syndrome’s flawed diagnostic criteria, she outlines its inextricable ties to the criminalization of Afro-Latiné religions. Beliso-De Jesús demonstrates that it is yet a further example of the systemic racism that pervades law enforcement in which the culpability for state violence is shifted from the state onto its victims. In so doing, she furthers understanding of the complex layers of medicalized state-sanctioned violence against people of color in the United States.”—Duke University Press

Excited Delirium Book Tour poster