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Book
James Joyce · 1922
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What this book knows
Black women's sexuality is a contested site where silence, transgression, and racialized power converge to shape identity and resistance.
erotic-as-power
Through the trope of sexuality, this study examines characterizations of black women who rebel unapologetically against constructions of silence about their sexuality.
UBU-RC-008The regulation of sexuality or 'prohibition' becomes a source of power that not only restrains the body but also controls 'knowledge and social action.'
UBU-RC-115Desire erupts into violence marked by extremities; silence is characterized by an insidiousness that threatens, compromises, and transgresses.
UBU-RC-114shame
Marked as morally/sexually depraved and outside the realm of womanhood, black women embraced dissemblance and propriety to contest pathologized sexual infamy.
UBU-RC-022Miss Eva's commentary calls into question the 'normativity' and privileging of sexual preservation in organized religion.
UBU-RC-135embodiment
A black body rendered subject to the gaze, the fascination, the pleasure and titillation of others, publicizing racialized gendered sexual exposure.
UBU-RC-1506 published passages · book excerpt · research analysis
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