Book contents
- The Cambridge History of Queer American Literature
- The Cambridge History of Queer American Literature
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Synchronic Histories of American Sexuality
- Part II Diachronic Histories of American Sexuality
- Queer Genre
- Race and the Politics of Queer and Trans Representation
- 28 Whiteness and Trans Genre, Whiteness as Trans Genre
- 29 Queer Types for Early Asian American Literature
- 30 The Queerness of Blackness
- 31 Two-Spirit Writers and Queer Native American Literature
- 32 The Insubordination of Latina Literature
- Space and the Regional Imaginary of Queer Literature
- Part III Queer Methods
- Index
30 - The Queerness of Blackness
from Race and the Politics of Queer and Trans Representation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 May 2024
- The Cambridge History of Queer American Literature
- The Cambridge History of Queer American Literature
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Synchronic Histories of American Sexuality
- Part II Diachronic Histories of American Sexuality
- Queer Genre
- Race and the Politics of Queer and Trans Representation
- 28 Whiteness and Trans Genre, Whiteness as Trans Genre
- 29 Queer Types for Early Asian American Literature
- 30 The Queerness of Blackness
- 31 Two-Spirit Writers and Queer Native American Literature
- 32 The Insubordination of Latina Literature
- Space and the Regional Imaginary of Queer Literature
- Part III Queer Methods
- Index
Summary
This chapter works through multiple valences of queerness in relation to blackness. Alongside the presence of non-normative sexual practices, intimacies, and identifications within black literatures this chapter looks at ways that blackness is often posited as already queer, part of the residue of having been hailed as property. In this reading, blackness destabilizes or “queers” the category of the person. This happens through the blurring of the categories of person and object as well as the possibility of making a distinction between an individual and a collective social identity. We might consider this person-object blurriness to be one of the effects of the processes of commodification that enslavement entailed. This estrangement from personhood though enfleshment, objectification, and loss of the mother also introduces literary possibilities of resistance in a queer register, including movements to mourn and re-find the mother, sonic resistance, and other uses of the flesh to produce forms of embodiment that evade traditional forms of capture. Here, queerness is related to finding different ways to describe orientations toward the world and pleasure.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge History of Queer American Literature , pp. 567 - 580Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024