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Black Women Identity And Cultural Theory Unbecoming The Subject Kevin Everod Quashie

  • SKU: BELL-7202566
Black Women Identity And Cultural Theory Unbecoming The Subject Kevin Everod Quashie
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Black Women Identity And Cultural Theory Unbecoming The Subject Kevin Everod Quashie instant download after payment.

Publisher: Rutgers University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.52 MB
Pages: 241
Author: Kevin Everod Quashie
ISBN: 9780813533674, 0813533678
Language: English
Year: 2004

Product desciption

Black Women Identity And Cultural Theory Unbecoming The Subject Kevin Everod Quashie by Kevin Everod Quashie 9780813533674, 0813533678 instant download after payment.

In Black Women, Identity, and Cultural Theory, Kevin Everod Quashie explores the metaphor of the "girlfriend" as a new way of understanding three central concepts of cultural studies: self, memory, and language. He considers how the work of writers such as Toni Morrison, Ama Ata Aidoo, Dionne Brand, photographer Lorna Simpson, and many others, inform debates over the concept of identity. Quashie argues that these authors and artists replace the notion of a stable, singular identity with the concept of the self developing in a process both communal and perpetually fluid, a relationship that functions in much the same way that an adult woman negotiates with her girlfriend(s). He suggests that memory itself is corporeal, a literal body that is crucial to the process of becoming. Quashie also explores the problem language poses for the black woman artist and her commitment to a mastery that neither colonizes nor excludes.
The analysis throughout interacts with schools of thought such as psychoanalysis, postmodernism, and post-colonialism, but ultimately moves beyond these to propose a new cultural aesthetic, one that ultimately aims to center black women and their philosophies.

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