The Lemonade Reader (eBook, ePUB)
Beyoncé, Black Feminism and Spirituality
Redaktion: Brooks, Kinitra D.; Martin, Kameelah L.
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The Lemonade Reader (eBook, ePUB)
Beyoncé, Black Feminism and Spirituality
Redaktion: Brooks, Kinitra D.; Martin, Kameelah L.
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This is in interdisciplinary collection that explores the nuances of Beyoncé's 2016 visual album, Lemonade. Essays and editorials present fresh, cutting-edge scholarship fuelled by contemporary thoughts on film, material culture, religion, and black feminism.
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This is in interdisciplinary collection that explores the nuances of Beyoncé's 2016 visual album, Lemonade. Essays and editorials present fresh, cutting-edge scholarship fuelled by contemporary thoughts on film, material culture, religion, and black feminism.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 286
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780429945977
- Artikelnr.: 56888016
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 286
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780429945977
- Artikelnr.: 56888016
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Kinitra D. Brooks is the Audrey and John Leslie Endowed Chair in Literary Studies in the Department of English at Michigan State University, USA. Dr. Brooks specializes in the study of black women, genre fiction, and popular culture. She currently has two books in print: Searching for Sycorax: Black Women's Hauntings of Contemporary Horror (2017), a critical treatment of black women in science fiction, fantasy, and horror; and Sycorax's Daughters (2017), an edited volume of short horror fiction written by black women. Her current research focuses on portrayals of the conjure woman in popular culture. Dr. Brooks is serving as the Advancing Equity Through Research Fellow at the Hutchins Center for African & African American Research at Harvard University for the 2018-2019 academic year. Kameelah L. Martin is Professor of African American Studies and English at the College of Charleston in South Carolina, USA, where she is also Director of the African American Studies Program. Dr. Martin's research explores the lore cycle of the conjure woman as an archetype in literature and visual texts. She is author of two monographs: Conjuring Moments in African American Literature: Women, Spirit Work, and Other Such Hoodoo (2013) and Envisioning Black Feminist Voodoo Aesthetics: African Spirituality in American Cinema (2016). She is the Assistant Editor of the College Language Association Journal and has published in Studies in the Literary Imagination; Black Women, Gender, and Families; and the African American National Biography. She has edited special issues of Genealogy and South Atlantic Review, and co-edited a section of The Routledge Anthology of African American Rhetoric (2018).
Foreword by Candice Benbow; Preface by T. Denean Sharpley
Whiting; Acknowledgements; Introduction by Kinitra D. Brooks & Kameelah L. Martin; Interlude A: What Do We Want from Beyoncé? by Maiysha Kai; Interlude B: Bittersweet Like Me: When the Lemonade Ain't Made For Fat Black Femmes and Women by Ashleigh Shackelford; Part I: Some Shit is Just for Us Chapter One
Some Shit is Just for Us: Intro by Cheryl Finley and Deborah Willis; Chapter Two
Something Akin to Freedom: Sexual Love, Political Agency, and Lemonade by Lindsey Stewart; Chapter Three
Getting to the Roots of "Becky with the Good Hair" in Lemonade by Janell Hobson; Chapter Four
Pull the Sorrow from Between My Legs: Lemonade as Rumination on Reproduction and Loss by LaKisha M. Simmons; Chapter Five
The Language of Lemonade: The Sociolinguistic and Rhetorical Strategies Beyoncé's Lemonade by Alexis McGee; Interlude C: How Not to Listen to Lemonade: Music Criticism and Epistemic Violence by Robin James; Interlude D: Women Like Her Cannot be Contained: Warsan Shire and Poetic Potential in Lemonade by Shauna M. Morgan; Part II: Of Her Spiritual Strivings Chapter Six
Looking for Beyonce's Spiritual Longing: The Power of Visual/Sonic Meaning
Making by Valerie Bridgeman; Chapter Seven
Beyoncé's Lemonade Folklore: Feminine Reverberations of Odú and Afro
Cuban Orisha Iconography by Nicholas R. Jones; Chapter Eight
The Slay Factor: Beyoncé Unleashing the Black Feminine Divine in a Blaze of Glory by Melanie C. Jones; Chapter Nine
Beyonce's Diaspora Heritage and Ancestry in Lemonade by Patricia Coloma Peñate; Chapter Ten
Signifying Waters: The Magnetic and Poetic Magic of Oshún as Reflected in Beyoncé's Lemonade by Martin A. Tsang; Chapter Eleven
Beyoncé Reborn: Lemonade as Spiritual Enlightenment by Lauren V. Highsmith; Interlude E: From Destiny's Child to Coachella by L. Michael Gipson; Interlude F: "Formation" and the Black
Ass Truth about Beyoncé and Capitalism by Tamara Winfrey Harris; Part III: The Lady Sings Her Legacy Chapter Twelve
The Lady Sings Her Legacy: Introduction by Daphne Brooks; Chapter Thirteen
To Feel Like a "Natural Woman": Aretha Franklin, Beyoncé and the Ecological Spirituality of Lemonade by Michele Prettyman Beverly; Chapter Fourteen
Beyoncé's Western South Serenade by Tyina Steptoe; Chapter Fifteen
Beysthetics: "Formation" and the Politics of Style by Tanisha C. Ford; Chapter Sixteen
"I Used to Be Your Sweet Mama": Beyoncé at the Crossroads of Blues and Conjure in Lemonade by Kinitra D. Brooks & Kameelah L. Martin; Chapter Seventeen
Beyoncé's Lemonade and the Black Swan Effect by Kyra Gaunt; Chapter Eighteen
She Gave You Lemonade, Stop Trying to Say It's Tang: Calling Out How Race
Gender Bias Obscures Black Women's Achievements in Pop Music by Birgitta Johnson; Interlude G: Erasing Shame
Beyonce's Lemonade and the Black Woman's Narrative in Cinema by Aramide Tinubu; Afterword by Regina N. Bradley
Whiting; Acknowledgements; Introduction by Kinitra D. Brooks & Kameelah L. Martin; Interlude A: What Do We Want from Beyoncé? by Maiysha Kai; Interlude B: Bittersweet Like Me: When the Lemonade Ain't Made For Fat Black Femmes and Women by Ashleigh Shackelford; Part I: Some Shit is Just for Us Chapter One
Some Shit is Just for Us: Intro by Cheryl Finley and Deborah Willis; Chapter Two
Something Akin to Freedom: Sexual Love, Political Agency, and Lemonade by Lindsey Stewart; Chapter Three
Getting to the Roots of "Becky with the Good Hair" in Lemonade by Janell Hobson; Chapter Four
Pull the Sorrow from Between My Legs: Lemonade as Rumination on Reproduction and Loss by LaKisha M. Simmons; Chapter Five
The Language of Lemonade: The Sociolinguistic and Rhetorical Strategies Beyoncé's Lemonade by Alexis McGee; Interlude C: How Not to Listen to Lemonade: Music Criticism and Epistemic Violence by Robin James; Interlude D: Women Like Her Cannot be Contained: Warsan Shire and Poetic Potential in Lemonade by Shauna M. Morgan; Part II: Of Her Spiritual Strivings Chapter Six
Looking for Beyonce's Spiritual Longing: The Power of Visual/Sonic Meaning
Making by Valerie Bridgeman; Chapter Seven
Beyoncé's Lemonade Folklore: Feminine Reverberations of Odú and Afro
Cuban Orisha Iconography by Nicholas R. Jones; Chapter Eight
The Slay Factor: Beyoncé Unleashing the Black Feminine Divine in a Blaze of Glory by Melanie C. Jones; Chapter Nine
Beyonce's Diaspora Heritage and Ancestry in Lemonade by Patricia Coloma Peñate; Chapter Ten
Signifying Waters: The Magnetic and Poetic Magic of Oshún as Reflected in Beyoncé's Lemonade by Martin A. Tsang; Chapter Eleven
Beyoncé Reborn: Lemonade as Spiritual Enlightenment by Lauren V. Highsmith; Interlude E: From Destiny's Child to Coachella by L. Michael Gipson; Interlude F: "Formation" and the Black
Ass Truth about Beyoncé and Capitalism by Tamara Winfrey Harris; Part III: The Lady Sings Her Legacy Chapter Twelve
The Lady Sings Her Legacy: Introduction by Daphne Brooks; Chapter Thirteen
To Feel Like a "Natural Woman": Aretha Franklin, Beyoncé and the Ecological Spirituality of Lemonade by Michele Prettyman Beverly; Chapter Fourteen
Beyoncé's Western South Serenade by Tyina Steptoe; Chapter Fifteen
Beysthetics: "Formation" and the Politics of Style by Tanisha C. Ford; Chapter Sixteen
"I Used to Be Your Sweet Mama": Beyoncé at the Crossroads of Blues and Conjure in Lemonade by Kinitra D. Brooks & Kameelah L. Martin; Chapter Seventeen
Beyoncé's Lemonade and the Black Swan Effect by Kyra Gaunt; Chapter Eighteen
She Gave You Lemonade, Stop Trying to Say It's Tang: Calling Out How Race
Gender Bias Obscures Black Women's Achievements in Pop Music by Birgitta Johnson; Interlude G: Erasing Shame
Beyonce's Lemonade and the Black Woman's Narrative in Cinema by Aramide Tinubu; Afterword by Regina N. Bradley
Foreword by Candice Benbow; Preface by T. Denean Sharpley
Whiting; Acknowledgements; Introduction by Kinitra D. Brooks & Kameelah L. Martin; Interlude A: What Do We Want from Beyoncé? by Maiysha Kai; Interlude B: Bittersweet Like Me: When the Lemonade Ain't Made For Fat Black Femmes and Women by Ashleigh Shackelford; Part I: Some Shit is Just for Us Chapter One
Some Shit is Just for Us: Intro by Cheryl Finley and Deborah Willis; Chapter Two
Something Akin to Freedom: Sexual Love, Political Agency, and Lemonade by Lindsey Stewart; Chapter Three
Getting to the Roots of "Becky with the Good Hair" in Lemonade by Janell Hobson; Chapter Four
Pull the Sorrow from Between My Legs: Lemonade as Rumination on Reproduction and Loss by LaKisha M. Simmons; Chapter Five
The Language of Lemonade: The Sociolinguistic and Rhetorical Strategies Beyoncé's Lemonade by Alexis McGee; Interlude C: How Not to Listen to Lemonade: Music Criticism and Epistemic Violence by Robin James; Interlude D: Women Like Her Cannot be Contained: Warsan Shire and Poetic Potential in Lemonade by Shauna M. Morgan; Part II: Of Her Spiritual Strivings Chapter Six
Looking for Beyonce's Spiritual Longing: The Power of Visual/Sonic Meaning
Making by Valerie Bridgeman; Chapter Seven
Beyoncé's Lemonade Folklore: Feminine Reverberations of Odú and Afro
Cuban Orisha Iconography by Nicholas R. Jones; Chapter Eight
The Slay Factor: Beyoncé Unleashing the Black Feminine Divine in a Blaze of Glory by Melanie C. Jones; Chapter Nine
Beyonce's Diaspora Heritage and Ancestry in Lemonade by Patricia Coloma Peñate; Chapter Ten
Signifying Waters: The Magnetic and Poetic Magic of Oshún as Reflected in Beyoncé's Lemonade by Martin A. Tsang; Chapter Eleven
Beyoncé Reborn: Lemonade as Spiritual Enlightenment by Lauren V. Highsmith; Interlude E: From Destiny's Child to Coachella by L. Michael Gipson; Interlude F: "Formation" and the Black
Ass Truth about Beyoncé and Capitalism by Tamara Winfrey Harris; Part III: The Lady Sings Her Legacy Chapter Twelve
The Lady Sings Her Legacy: Introduction by Daphne Brooks; Chapter Thirteen
To Feel Like a "Natural Woman": Aretha Franklin, Beyoncé and the Ecological Spirituality of Lemonade by Michele Prettyman Beverly; Chapter Fourteen
Beyoncé's Western South Serenade by Tyina Steptoe; Chapter Fifteen
Beysthetics: "Formation" and the Politics of Style by Tanisha C. Ford; Chapter Sixteen
"I Used to Be Your Sweet Mama": Beyoncé at the Crossroads of Blues and Conjure in Lemonade by Kinitra D. Brooks & Kameelah L. Martin; Chapter Seventeen
Beyoncé's Lemonade and the Black Swan Effect by Kyra Gaunt; Chapter Eighteen
She Gave You Lemonade, Stop Trying to Say It's Tang: Calling Out How Race
Gender Bias Obscures Black Women's Achievements in Pop Music by Birgitta Johnson; Interlude G: Erasing Shame
Beyonce's Lemonade and the Black Woman's Narrative in Cinema by Aramide Tinubu; Afterword by Regina N. Bradley
Whiting; Acknowledgements; Introduction by Kinitra D. Brooks & Kameelah L. Martin; Interlude A: What Do We Want from Beyoncé? by Maiysha Kai; Interlude B: Bittersweet Like Me: When the Lemonade Ain't Made For Fat Black Femmes and Women by Ashleigh Shackelford; Part I: Some Shit is Just for Us Chapter One
Some Shit is Just for Us: Intro by Cheryl Finley and Deborah Willis; Chapter Two
Something Akin to Freedom: Sexual Love, Political Agency, and Lemonade by Lindsey Stewart; Chapter Three
Getting to the Roots of "Becky with the Good Hair" in Lemonade by Janell Hobson; Chapter Four
Pull the Sorrow from Between My Legs: Lemonade as Rumination on Reproduction and Loss by LaKisha M. Simmons; Chapter Five
The Language of Lemonade: The Sociolinguistic and Rhetorical Strategies Beyoncé's Lemonade by Alexis McGee; Interlude C: How Not to Listen to Lemonade: Music Criticism and Epistemic Violence by Robin James; Interlude D: Women Like Her Cannot be Contained: Warsan Shire and Poetic Potential in Lemonade by Shauna M. Morgan; Part II: Of Her Spiritual Strivings Chapter Six
Looking for Beyonce's Spiritual Longing: The Power of Visual/Sonic Meaning
Making by Valerie Bridgeman; Chapter Seven
Beyoncé's Lemonade Folklore: Feminine Reverberations of Odú and Afro
Cuban Orisha Iconography by Nicholas R. Jones; Chapter Eight
The Slay Factor: Beyoncé Unleashing the Black Feminine Divine in a Blaze of Glory by Melanie C. Jones; Chapter Nine
Beyonce's Diaspora Heritage and Ancestry in Lemonade by Patricia Coloma Peñate; Chapter Ten
Signifying Waters: The Magnetic and Poetic Magic of Oshún as Reflected in Beyoncé's Lemonade by Martin A. Tsang; Chapter Eleven
Beyoncé Reborn: Lemonade as Spiritual Enlightenment by Lauren V. Highsmith; Interlude E: From Destiny's Child to Coachella by L. Michael Gipson; Interlude F: "Formation" and the Black
Ass Truth about Beyoncé and Capitalism by Tamara Winfrey Harris; Part III: The Lady Sings Her Legacy Chapter Twelve
The Lady Sings Her Legacy: Introduction by Daphne Brooks; Chapter Thirteen
To Feel Like a "Natural Woman": Aretha Franklin, Beyoncé and the Ecological Spirituality of Lemonade by Michele Prettyman Beverly; Chapter Fourteen
Beyoncé's Western South Serenade by Tyina Steptoe; Chapter Fifteen
Beysthetics: "Formation" and the Politics of Style by Tanisha C. Ford; Chapter Sixteen
"I Used to Be Your Sweet Mama": Beyoncé at the Crossroads of Blues and Conjure in Lemonade by Kinitra D. Brooks & Kameelah L. Martin; Chapter Seventeen
Beyoncé's Lemonade and the Black Swan Effect by Kyra Gaunt; Chapter Eighteen
She Gave You Lemonade, Stop Trying to Say It's Tang: Calling Out How Race
Gender Bias Obscures Black Women's Achievements in Pop Music by Birgitta Johnson; Interlude G: Erasing Shame
Beyonce's Lemonade and the Black Woman's Narrative in Cinema by Aramide Tinubu; Afterword by Regina N. Bradley