Black Men, Black Feminism: Lucifer’s Nocturne

Springer Verlag (2018)
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Abstract

A brief commentary on the necessity and the impossibility of black men’s participation in the development of black feminist theory and politics, Black Men, Black Feminism examines the basic assumptions that have guided—and misguided—black men’s efforts to take up black feminism. Offering a rejoinder to the contemporary study of black men and masculinity in the twenty-first century, Jared Sexton interrogates some of the most common intellectual postures of black men writing about black feminism, ultimately departing from the prevailing discourse on progressive black masculinities. Sexton examines, by contrast, black men’s critical and creative work—from Charles Burnett’s Killer of Sheep to Jordan Peele’s Get Out— to describe the cultural logic that provides a limited moral impetus to the quest for black male feminism and that might, if reconfigured, prompt an ethical response of an entirely different order.

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Chapters

Unbearable Blackness

This chapter explores the ethics and politics of violence as a question for black feminism, in the special light cast by the ongoing movement for black lives. It suggests that the problem of state-sanctioned violence against black men and boys can and should be recast as a matter of reproductive jus... see more

Where Manhood Lies

This chapter surveys the academic literature on “black male feminism,” with a critical focus on the foundational work of literary critic and cultural historian Michael Awkward since the 1990s. Contrasting readings are presented of scholars David Marriott on “blackness and deathliness” and the late A... see more

Speak of the Devil

This chapter introduces the problematic of black masculinity in an antiblack world. It draws, to that end, upon legal scholar Paul Butler’s The Chokehold and literary critic Darieck Scott’s Extravagant Abjection. “Lucifer” is discussed as a useful name for the complexity of black masculinity in theo... see more

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