Blackness at the Intersection
Herausgeber: Wilson, Annabel; Crenshaw, Kimberle; Andrews, Kehinde
Blackness at the Intersection
Herausgeber: Wilson, Annabel; Crenshaw, Kimberle; Andrews, Kehinde
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A ground-breaking collection applying Crenshawâ s concept of intersectionality to the black diasporic experience in Britain.
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A ground-breaking collection applying Crenshawâ s concept of intersectionality to the black diasporic experience in Britain.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Blackness in Britain
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Februar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 219mm x 150mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 446g
- ISBN-13: 9781786998644
- ISBN-10: 1786998645
- Artikelnr.: 59995463
- Blackness in Britain
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Februar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 219mm x 150mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 446g
- ISBN-13: 9781786998644
- ISBN-10: 1786998645
- Artikelnr.: 59995463
Kimberlé W. Crenshaw is Isidor and Seville Sulzbacher Professor of Law at Columbia Law School, USA. She is a pioneering scholar of critical race theory, who coined the term 'intersectionality'. Kehinde Andrews is Professor of Black Studies at Birmingham City University, UK. He is author of Back to Black: Retelling Black Radicalism for the 21st Century (2018), Resisting Racism: Race, Inequality and the Black Supplementary School Movement (2013) and The New Age of Empire (2021). Annabel Wilson is a sociologist. She has recently completed a PhD at Cardiff University. Annabel is a project manager and research associate on Surviving Storms: The Caribbean Cyclone Cartography project, which is based at Goldsmiths University.
Dedication List of Contributors Table of Contents 1. Introduction:
Reframing intersectionality Kimberlé Crenshaw, Kehinde Andrews and Annabel
Wilson Part I: Institutional Oppressions 2. Reframing intersectionality: A
'herstory' of my mother Annabel Wilson 3. Herstories: Black Brazilian women
narrating intersectional oppressions in the United Kingdom Katucha Bento
4. (In)visible Black women (be)longing in Scotland Francesca Sobande Part
II: Marginalizing Black voices 5. Freshwater fish in saltwater: Black men's
accounts navigating discriminatory waters in UK higher education
Constantino Dumangane 6. 'A sweaty concept': Decolonizing the legacies of
British slave ownership and archival space Kelena Reid 7. Black crip
killjoys: Dissident voices and neglected stories from the margins Viji
Kuppan 8. Racializing femininity Mary Igenoza 9. 'It's not even an attitude
. but a way of being!': Negotiating Black British women's lived experiences
Dionne Taylor Part III: Counter Narratives 10. Fierce intersections:
Thinking through portraits of Black queer youth in Britain Eddie
Bruce-Jones and Ajamu X 11. Mediating the praxis of intersectionality:
Curatorial poaching on Tumblr Kadian Pow 12. Illuminating experiences among
inner-city Black British single mothers and their sons Miranda Armstrong
13. 'Stop killing the man dem': Prospects for intersectionality Black
politics Kehinde Andrews 14. Blackness is the intersection Kimberlé
Crenshaw, Kehinde Andrews and Annabel Wilson Notes Bibliography Index
Reframing intersectionality Kimberlé Crenshaw, Kehinde Andrews and Annabel
Wilson Part I: Institutional Oppressions 2. Reframing intersectionality: A
'herstory' of my mother Annabel Wilson 3. Herstories: Black Brazilian women
narrating intersectional oppressions in the United Kingdom Katucha Bento
4. (In)visible Black women (be)longing in Scotland Francesca Sobande Part
II: Marginalizing Black voices 5. Freshwater fish in saltwater: Black men's
accounts navigating discriminatory waters in UK higher education
Constantino Dumangane 6. 'A sweaty concept': Decolonizing the legacies of
British slave ownership and archival space Kelena Reid 7. Black crip
killjoys: Dissident voices and neglected stories from the margins Viji
Kuppan 8. Racializing femininity Mary Igenoza 9. 'It's not even an attitude
. but a way of being!': Negotiating Black British women's lived experiences
Dionne Taylor Part III: Counter Narratives 10. Fierce intersections:
Thinking through portraits of Black queer youth in Britain Eddie
Bruce-Jones and Ajamu X 11. Mediating the praxis of intersectionality:
Curatorial poaching on Tumblr Kadian Pow 12. Illuminating experiences among
inner-city Black British single mothers and their sons Miranda Armstrong
13. 'Stop killing the man dem': Prospects for intersectionality Black
politics Kehinde Andrews 14. Blackness is the intersection Kimberlé
Crenshaw, Kehinde Andrews and Annabel Wilson Notes Bibliography Index
Dedication List of Contributors Table of Contents 1. Introduction:
Reframing intersectionality Kimberlé Crenshaw, Kehinde Andrews and Annabel
Wilson Part I: Institutional Oppressions 2. Reframing intersectionality: A
'herstory' of my mother Annabel Wilson 3. Herstories: Black Brazilian women
narrating intersectional oppressions in the United Kingdom Katucha Bento
4. (In)visible Black women (be)longing in Scotland Francesca Sobande Part
II: Marginalizing Black voices 5. Freshwater fish in saltwater: Black men's
accounts navigating discriminatory waters in UK higher education
Constantino Dumangane 6. 'A sweaty concept': Decolonizing the legacies of
British slave ownership and archival space Kelena Reid 7. Black crip
killjoys: Dissident voices and neglected stories from the margins Viji
Kuppan 8. Racializing femininity Mary Igenoza 9. 'It's not even an attitude
. but a way of being!': Negotiating Black British women's lived experiences
Dionne Taylor Part III: Counter Narratives 10. Fierce intersections:
Thinking through portraits of Black queer youth in Britain Eddie
Bruce-Jones and Ajamu X 11. Mediating the praxis of intersectionality:
Curatorial poaching on Tumblr Kadian Pow 12. Illuminating experiences among
inner-city Black British single mothers and their sons Miranda Armstrong
13. 'Stop killing the man dem': Prospects for intersectionality Black
politics Kehinde Andrews 14. Blackness is the intersection Kimberlé
Crenshaw, Kehinde Andrews and Annabel Wilson Notes Bibliography Index
Reframing intersectionality Kimberlé Crenshaw, Kehinde Andrews and Annabel
Wilson Part I: Institutional Oppressions 2. Reframing intersectionality: A
'herstory' of my mother Annabel Wilson 3. Herstories: Black Brazilian women
narrating intersectional oppressions in the United Kingdom Katucha Bento
4. (In)visible Black women (be)longing in Scotland Francesca Sobande Part
II: Marginalizing Black voices 5. Freshwater fish in saltwater: Black men's
accounts navigating discriminatory waters in UK higher education
Constantino Dumangane 6. 'A sweaty concept': Decolonizing the legacies of
British slave ownership and archival space Kelena Reid 7. Black crip
killjoys: Dissident voices and neglected stories from the margins Viji
Kuppan 8. Racializing femininity Mary Igenoza 9. 'It's not even an attitude
. but a way of being!': Negotiating Black British women's lived experiences
Dionne Taylor Part III: Counter Narratives 10. Fierce intersections:
Thinking through portraits of Black queer youth in Britain Eddie
Bruce-Jones and Ajamu X 11. Mediating the praxis of intersectionality:
Curatorial poaching on Tumblr Kadian Pow 12. Illuminating experiences among
inner-city Black British single mothers and their sons Miranda Armstrong
13. 'Stop killing the man dem': Prospects for intersectionality Black
politics Kehinde Andrews 14. Blackness is the intersection Kimberlé
Crenshaw, Kehinde Andrews and Annabel Wilson Notes Bibliography Index