Book cover of "A Feel for Thinking" by Sharon Luk with colorful hand-drawn annotations on a cloudy background.

A Feel for Thinking

Lessons for a Political Education

by Sharon Luk

A pocket book on big ideas in social justice for those seeking refuge in learning.

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Preorder ships October 2026

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  • Forthcoming October 2026
  • ISBN: 9781773638690
  • 126 pages
  • CA$20.00
  • For sale worldwide

About the book

With universities tightening their grip on dissent, speech, and creativity, the opportunities for marginalized students to access social justice curriculum and mentorship are shrinking. A Feel for Thinking is a salve in these bleak conditions: a study guide for readers who want to ground themselves in radical ideas. In conversational style, Sharon Luk offers an orientation to long-standing ideas rooted in social justice traditions, helping readers unpack concepts in contemporary abolitionist thought.

Drawing on the conceptual work of major thinkers like Cedric Robinson on racial capitalism, Robyn Maynard and Ruth Wilson Gilmore on abolition, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson on Indigenous traditions of world-making, and Robin D.G. Kelley, Fred Moten, and Stefano Harney on solidarity, Luk suffuses A Feel for Thinking with personal stories of her own wayfinding through these complex ideas. Refuting the cynical expression, “those who can’t do, teach,” Luk proves that, on the contrary, those who teach, do. Luk demonstrates her skill in critical pedagogy, encouraging and supporting readers to cultivate their intellectual practice to anchor themselves in their uniqueness and specificities in struggle with others.

Cultural Studies Education Race & Anti-Racism Research & Theory Capitalism & Alternatives

What people are saying

Robyn Maynard, author of Policing Black Lives, co-author of Rehearsals for Living and assistant professor at University of Toronto

A Feel for Thinking is a gift, a balm against despair, and a meditation on how we struggle to craft more liberatory futures in the wake of the present catastrophe”

Itrath Syed, Muslim community activist and instructor in Women’s Studies at Langara College

“For the generation being politicized by witnessing genocide and the increasing brutality of the nation-state, this book provides foundational political thinking and feeling upon which to build their activism. Luk’s writing is a heartfelt balm for all of us struggling to meaningfully resist while also working to build a better world.”

Ruth Wilson Gilmore, author of Abolition Geography

“Elegant, poetic, funny, A Feel for Thinking invites us to reflect on the practice and purpose of study. Combining poignant memoir with lucid analysis of key ideas, this profound little book should be read by organizers and other students of oppositional studies.”

Orlando R. Serrano, Jr., Head of Pre-K-12 Learning, National Museum of American History

A Feel for Thinking is an invitation to enter into the internal, epoch-spanning, deeply relational dialogue that is learning. It is also a promise that, should one choose to genuinely engage in the intellectual and emotional labor of learning together, worlds break open, portals to conditions of possibility otherwise reveal themselves. Luk calls us into ourselves and community through study and reminds us, we belong to each other.”

Author

Sharon Luk

Sharon Luk was born and raised in the San Francisco Bay area. Before an academic career, she worked mainly in independent media and youth and community development. She is an associate professor and Tier II Canada Research Chair in Geographies of Racialization in the Department of Geography at Simon Fraser University. She also held positions at the University of Oregon, Stanford University, and the University of California, Los Angeles. Her first book, The Life of Paper: Letters and a Poetics of Living Beyond Captivity (University of California Press, 2018) won awards from the American Studies Association and Modern Language Association. She has written numerous articles about racial capitalism, state violence, women of colour feminisms, and abolitionist practice. She is working on a book called Sea of Fire: An Abolitionist Inquiry into the Making of Nonviolence, which recontextualizes dominant notions of nonviolence in relation to evolving meanings and movements of the global South. 

Contents

  • Introduction: : The Rest of Us
  • Part 1: : A Feel for Thinking
  • : Serious Thought
  • : Living Together
  • : Emotional States
  • : On Despair
  • Part 2: : Care Work
  • : Making Money
  • : Racial Capitalism
  • : Terms of Relationality
  • : Remaking Freedom Struggles
  • : Filling the Circle

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