
Black Feminism Reimagined
After Intersectionality
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Narrated by:
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Lisa Reneé Pitts
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By:
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Jennifer C. Nash
About this listen
In Black Feminism Reimagined, Jennifer C. Nash reframes Black feminism's engagement with intersectionality, often celebrated as its primary intellectual and political contribution to feminist theory. Charting the institutional history and contemporary uses of intersectionality in the academy, Nash outlines how women's studies has both elevated intersectionality to the discipline's primary program-building initiative and cast intersectionality as a threat to feminism's coherence. As intersectionality has become a central feminist preoccupation, Nash argues that Black feminism has been marked by a single affect - defensiveness - manifested by efforts to police intersectionality's usages and circulations. Nash contends that only by letting go of this deeply alluring protectionist stance, the desire to make property of knowledge, can Black feminists reimagine intellectual production in ways that unleash Black feminist theory's visionary world-making possibilities.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
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Great book. Too many footnotes.
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- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Have you heard that language is violence and that science is sexist? Have you read that certain people shouldn't practice yoga? Or been told that being obese is healthy, that there is no such thing as biological sex, or that only White people can be racist? Are you confused by these ideas, and do you wonder how they have managed to challenge the logic of Western society? In this probing volume, Helen Pluckrose and James Lindsay document the evolution of the dogma that informs these ideas, from its coarse origins in French postmodernism to its refinement within activist academic fields.
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Vast Amount of Jargon Lost Me
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- Unabridged
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Performance
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Story
Why does race seem to color almost every feature of our moral and political universe? Why does a perpetual cycle of slavery - in all its political, intellectual, and cultural forms - continue to define the Black experience? And why is anti-Black violence such a predominant feature not only in the United States but around the world? These are just some of the compelling questions that animate Afropessimism, Frank B. Wilderson III’s seminal work on the philosophy of Blackness.
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Afropessimism goes beyond ESSENTIAL reading!!!
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What listeners say about Black Feminism Reimagined
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
- Sophie Lewis
- 04-09-21
A must-read of critical Black feminism
This book is fantastic. The narrator is very good but, frustratingly, there are some mispronunciations that recur over and over such as the word "multiply" which Nash uses as an adverb a lot (multiply marginalized) whereas it gets pronounced as the verb to multiply.
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