Synopses & Reviews
This book analyzes representative works of African American fiction, film, and music in which interracial desire appears in the context of same sex desire. In close readings of these "texts," Stefanie K. Dunning explores the ways in which the interracial intersects with queerness, blackness, whiteness, class, and black national identity. She shows that representations of interracial desire do not follow the logic of racial exclusion. Instead they are metaphorical and anti-biological. Rather than diluting race, interracial desire makes race visible. By invoking the interracial, black gay and lesbian artists can remake our conception of blackness.
Review
"The small paperback, light on jargon and devoid of pretension, is eminently readable, permitting Dunning's ideas to transmit fluidly across multifarious dsciplines and research interests in the arts and humanities." --Benjamin Grimwood, Black Camera
Review
"Dunning uses the trope of interraciality... to demonstrate how [it] actually reifies rather than obfuscates the black queer's 'blackness'." --E. Patrick Johnson, Northwestern University Indiana University Press
Review
"Dunning's text is beneficial to any scholar whose research explores race, gender, and sexuality." --MELUS, Vol. 35, No. 3, Fall 2010
Review
"... an intellectual illustration challenging the notion that the black queer is 'not black enough' and both examines and explains 'the frequent representation of the interracial as a device signifying the ideas of nation, authenticity and blackness.'" --Brandon Copeland, Feminist Review, Oct. 17, 2009
Review
"Queer studies has been disproportionately 'white' and androcentric.... Dunning's book helps fill this lacuna.... Her prose is concise, cogent, and readable." --LaShonda Barnett, Sarah Lawrence College Indiana University Press Indiana University Press
Synopsis
How representations of interracial desire create authentic blackness
About the Author
Stefanie K. Dunning is Associate Professor of English at Miami University of Ohio.
Table of Contents
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. "Ironic Soil": Recuperative Rhythms and Negotiated Nationalism
2. "No Tender Mercy": Same-Sex Desire, Interraciality, and the Black Nation
3. (Not) Loving Her: A Locus of Contradictions
4. "She's a B*(u)tch": Centering Blackness in The Watermelon Woman
Epilogue: Reading Robert Reid-Pharr
Notes
Index