Description

Book Synopsis
Omise'eke Natasha Tinsley traces how contemporary queer Caribbean and African American writers, filmmakers, musicians, and performers evoke the divinity Ezili—a pantheon of lwa feminine spirits in Vodou—in ways that offer a new model of queer black feminist theory.

Trade Review
"Ezili’s Mirrors thoroughly and carefully mines the utility and uniqueness of multiple spiritual and thought traditions, aesthetics, and sources of knowledge. . .. Ezili’s Mirrors is important because through it Tinsley shows us ways that black femme life and black queer life exists and asserts itself as other than the abject, the undesirable, the inappropriate, and the excessive." -- Alexandria Smith * The New Inquiry *
"I have longed for a book as daring as Ezili's Mirrors." -- Meredith Coleman-Tobias * Reading Religion *
"This pathbreaking work prompts Black feminist and queer diaspora scholars to use their academic training not as an endpoint, but as a point of departure, emboldening scholars to turn to whatever sources that are necessary to write books that will sustain alternative forms of knowing under increasing conditions of precarity in Black queer diasporic lives, loves, and labor." -- Darius Bost * The Black Scholar *
"Once in a great while, a gem of a book comes along. It is not only elegantly written and astutely composed, compellingly and courageously argued, but it also opens up new and generative ways of looking at the African diaspora and the disciplines devoted to its study. I am talking about Tinsley’s Ezili’s Mirrors. I read the book with intense joy, on many levels: its theoretical polyamory, its dazzling methodology, its engrossing narrations, and the different senses it calls on." -- Gloria Wekker * TSQ *
"Ezili's Mirrors makes an original contribution to the development of the field of queer black religion and to the ways in which this scholarship has a wider, public impact in the representation and self-understanding of queer-of-color spiritual communities whose members experience lives of constant fragmentation and recomposition daily, globally." -- Roberto Strongman * GLQ *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Bridge. Read This Book Like a Song 1
Introduction. For the Love of Laveau 3
Bridge. A Black Cisfemme Is a Beautiful Thing 29
1. To Transcender Transgender 31
Bridge. Sissy Werk 65
2. Mache Ansanm 67
Bridge. My Femdom, My Love 99
3. Riding the Red 101
Bridge. For the Party Girls 133
4. Its a Party 135
Bridge. Baía and Marigo 169
Conclusion. Arties's Song 171
Notes 195
Glossary 223
Bibliography 225
Index 241

Ezilis Mirrors Imagining Black Queer Genders

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    A Paperback / softback by Omise'eke Natasha Tinsley

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      View other formats and editions of Ezilis Mirrors Imagining Black Queer Genders by Omise'eke Natasha Tinsley

      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 27/02/2018
      ISBN13: 9780822370383, 978-0822370383
      ISBN10: 0822370387

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Omise'eke Natasha Tinsley traces how contemporary queer Caribbean and African American writers, filmmakers, musicians, and performers evoke the divinity Ezili—a pantheon of lwa feminine spirits in Vodou—in ways that offer a new model of queer black feminist theory.

      Trade Review
      "Ezili’s Mirrors thoroughly and carefully mines the utility and uniqueness of multiple spiritual and thought traditions, aesthetics, and sources of knowledge. . .. Ezili’s Mirrors is important because through it Tinsley shows us ways that black femme life and black queer life exists and asserts itself as other than the abject, the undesirable, the inappropriate, and the excessive." -- Alexandria Smith * The New Inquiry *
      "I have longed for a book as daring as Ezili's Mirrors." -- Meredith Coleman-Tobias * Reading Religion *
      "This pathbreaking work prompts Black feminist and queer diaspora scholars to use their academic training not as an endpoint, but as a point of departure, emboldening scholars to turn to whatever sources that are necessary to write books that will sustain alternative forms of knowing under increasing conditions of precarity in Black queer diasporic lives, loves, and labor." -- Darius Bost * The Black Scholar *
      "Once in a great while, a gem of a book comes along. It is not only elegantly written and astutely composed, compellingly and courageously argued, but it also opens up new and generative ways of looking at the African diaspora and the disciplines devoted to its study. I am talking about Tinsley’s Ezili’s Mirrors. I read the book with intense joy, on many levels: its theoretical polyamory, its dazzling methodology, its engrossing narrations, and the different senses it calls on." -- Gloria Wekker * TSQ *
      "Ezili's Mirrors makes an original contribution to the development of the field of queer black religion and to the ways in which this scholarship has a wider, public impact in the representation and self-understanding of queer-of-color spiritual communities whose members experience lives of constant fragmentation and recomposition daily, globally." -- Roberto Strongman * GLQ *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments ix
      Bridge. Read This Book Like a Song 1
      Introduction. For the Love of Laveau 3
      Bridge. A Black Cisfemme Is a Beautiful Thing 29
      1. To Transcender Transgender 31
      Bridge. Sissy Werk 65
      2. Mache Ansanm 67
      Bridge. My Femdom, My Love 99
      3. Riding the Red 101
      Bridge. For the Party Girls 133
      4. Its a Party 135
      Bridge. Baía and Marigo 169
      Conclusion. Arties's Song 171
      Notes 195
      Glossary 223
      Bibliography 225
      Index 241

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