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This collection invites us to think about how African-descended men are seen as both appealing and appalling, and exposed to eroticized hatred and violence and how some resist, accommodate, and capitalize on their eroticization. Drawing on James Baldwin and Frantz Fanon, the contributors examine the contradictions, paradoxes, and politico-psychosexual implications of Black men as objects of sexual desire, fear, and loathing. Kitossa and the contributing authors use Baldwin’s and Fanon’s cultural and psychoanalytic interpretations of Black masculinities to demonstrate their neglected contributions to thinking about and beyond colonialist and Western gender and masculinity studies. This innovative and sophisticated work will be of interest to scholars and students of cultural and media studies, gender and masculinities studies, sociology, political science, history, and critical race and racialization. Foreword by Tommy J. Curry.Contributors: Katerina Deliovsky, Delroy Hall, Dennis O. Howard, Elishma Khokhar, Tamari Kitossa, Kemar McIntosh, Leroy F. Moore Jr., Watufani M. Poe, Satwinder Rehal, John G. Russell, Mohan Siddi
Produktinformation
Utgivningsdatum2021-06-10
Mått152 x 229 x 20 mm
Vikt580 g
FormatHäftad
SpråkEngelska
Antal sidor536
FörlagUniversity of Alberta Press
ISBN9781772125436
UtmärkelserShort-listed for Scholarly & Academic Book of the Year, Alberta Book Publishing Awards, Book Publishers Association of Alberta 2022 (Canada)
Tamari Kitossa is Associate Professor of Sociology at Brock University. He studies the convergences of race, racism, and criminalization. He is a contributor to and co-editor of African Canadian Leadership.
Foreword xiBlack Maleness as a Deleterious Category / Tommy J. Curry Preface xxviiAcknowledgements xxxvIntroduction xxxixTamari Kitossa I Erotic Racism, Tropes, and Interracial SexArt, Nations, and Transnationalism 1 Can the Black Man Be Nude in a Culture That Imagines Him as Naked? 3A Baldwinian and Fanonian Psychosexual Reading of Black Masculinity in “Western” Art and Cinema / Tamari Kitossa 2 Anaconda East 59Fetishes, Phallacies, Chimbo Chauvinism, and the Displaced Discourse of Black Male Sexuality in Japan / John G. Russell 3 White Femininity, Black Masculinity, Sex/Romance Tourism, and the Politics of Feminist Theory 105Theorizing Desire and Erotic Racism / Katerina Deliovsky II What Does a Black Man Want?Situating the Lives of Black Men 4 Beyond the Exotic and the Grotesque 143Toward a Theology of Black Men and Radical Self-Love in the United Kingdom / Delroy Hall 5 A Krip-Hop Theory of Disabled Black Men 177Challenging the Disabling of Black America, Resisting Killing and Erasure Through the Arts and Self-Empowerment / Leroy F. Moore Jr. & Tamari Kitossa III National Culture, Transqueering Black Masculinities, and Challenging Hegemonic Masculinity 6 Carrying Corporeal Narratives 235Weighing the Burden of Antiqueer Representations in Jamaica / Kemar McIntosh 7 A Quare Eye to Slavery 265Black Homoerotic Encounters in Brazil and Cuba / Watufani M. Poe 8 “7 Eleven” 285Dialectics of Jamaican Popular Music Culture and Hegemonic Masculinity / Dennis O. Howard IV The Other Other and the Black ManHot Sex and the Black Man in the Global South 9 Sila ay Malaki 319Anti-African Racism, the “Filipino Gaze,” and the Paradox of Black Masculinity in Collegiate Basketball in the Philippines / Satwinder Singh Rehal 10 A Fanonist Reading of Anti-Black Sexual Racism in the Indian Imaginary 357Siddis, African Students, Anti-Blackness, and Psychosexual Politics in the Indian Ocean World and Its Diaspora / Tamari Kitossa, Elishma Noel Khokhar, & Mohan Siddi Contributors 409Index 413
“Appealing Because He Is Appalling engages critically with the work of James Baldwin and Frantz Fanon, exploring various registers of Black masculinity, Black sexuality and anti-Black racism. It is intersectional, reflective of social and political context, varied, and original in its scope.” Eddie Bruce-Jones, Reader in Law & Anthropology, Birkbeck College, University of London