On A Path of Decent Pleasures: Sex, Spirit, and Affect in Late Twentieth-Century African American Literature explores how queer modes of relationality have modified black religious expression in African American novels of the late twentieth century. By thinking through the category of the “queer” within an affective economy of relations rather than as an identity, my work attends to the biological and biopolitical pressures placed upon the construction of racial and social formations and collectivities. Through analyzing novels by James Baldwin, Toni Cade Bambara, Randall Kenan, Toni Morrison, and Alice Walker, this project illustrates the ways in which queerness has been operant in black religious space, expression, and thought in the post...
This dissertation brings together the frameworks of queer theory, performance studies and black femi...
This dissertation examines how contemporary African American women writers have used the novel of se...
My dissertation examines post-civil rights novels by Toni Morrison, Ann Allen Shockley, and Alice Wa...
On A Path of Decent Pleasures: Sex, Spirit, and Affect in Late Twentieth-Century African American Li...
On A Path of Decent Pleasures: Sex, Spirit, and Affect in Late Twentieth-Century African American Li...
On A Path of Decent Pleasures: Sex, Spirit, and Affect in Late Twentieth-Century African American Li...
My dissertation focusing on black women's literature explores how the dynamic relationships of black...
This dissertation, “History and Its Kind: The Charge of the Other in Black Gay Men’s Literatures,” e...
My dissertation focusing on black women's literature explores how the dynamic relationships of black...
This dissertation, “History and Its Kind: The Charge of the Other in Black Gay Men’s Literatures,” e...
This dissertation discusses Gayl Jones’s and Toni Morrison’s characterisation of black women’s journ...
This dissertation examines how contemporary African American women writers have used the novel of se...
Chapter One considers how black women\u27s literary works critique traditional literary paradigms th...
Chapter One considers how black women\u27s literary works critique traditional literary paradigms th...
“Queer Orientations” moves between the Harlem Renaissance and American modernism to show the shared ...
This dissertation brings together the frameworks of queer theory, performance studies and black femi...
This dissertation examines how contemporary African American women writers have used the novel of se...
My dissertation examines post-civil rights novels by Toni Morrison, Ann Allen Shockley, and Alice Wa...
On A Path of Decent Pleasures: Sex, Spirit, and Affect in Late Twentieth-Century African American Li...
On A Path of Decent Pleasures: Sex, Spirit, and Affect in Late Twentieth-Century African American Li...
On A Path of Decent Pleasures: Sex, Spirit, and Affect in Late Twentieth-Century African American Li...
My dissertation focusing on black women's literature explores how the dynamic relationships of black...
This dissertation, “History and Its Kind: The Charge of the Other in Black Gay Men’s Literatures,” e...
My dissertation focusing on black women's literature explores how the dynamic relationships of black...
This dissertation, “History and Its Kind: The Charge of the Other in Black Gay Men’s Literatures,” e...
This dissertation discusses Gayl Jones’s and Toni Morrison’s characterisation of black women’s journ...
This dissertation examines how contemporary African American women writers have used the novel of se...
Chapter One considers how black women\u27s literary works critique traditional literary paradigms th...
Chapter One considers how black women\u27s literary works critique traditional literary paradigms th...
“Queer Orientations” moves between the Harlem Renaissance and American modernism to show the shared ...
This dissertation brings together the frameworks of queer theory, performance studies and black femi...
This dissertation examines how contemporary African American women writers have used the novel of se...
My dissertation examines post-civil rights novels by Toni Morrison, Ann Allen Shockley, and Alice Wa...