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Whose Beloved Community?: The Intersections of Black and LGBTQ Civil Rights: New Black Studies Series

Autor Dwight A. McBride, Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Justin A. Joyce
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 oct 2026
Martin Luther King Jr.’s idea of “the beloved community” focused on the hoped-for new relationship between the oppressor and the oppressed after the success of a nonviolent movement. But the vision excluded, and sometimes still excludes, LGBTQIA+ people and Black women.

The editors curate essays that see beloved community as a generous space that centers justice. Taking inspiration from the radical moral vision of figures like Bayard Rustin and Audre Lorde, the contributors look at how Black queer, feminist, and trans thought and practice can cultivate belonging across lines of race, gender, sexuality, class, and region. Essayists use a variety of disciplinary and methodological perspectives that includes archival recovery, institutional critique, cultural analysis, ethnography, and political theory. The contributors define beloved community for themselves while offering entry points—through art, culture, activism, policy, pedagogy, and theory—for exploring what it means to belong, to resist, and to build.

Expansive and interdisciplinary, Whose Beloved Community? begins the process of advancing toward truly inclusive communities that are more honest, more complex, and more loving.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780252089855
ISBN-10: 0252089855
Pagini: 300
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Illinois Press
Colecția University of Illinois Press
Seria New Black Studies Series


Notă biografică

Beverly Guy-Sheftall is the Anna Julia Cooper Professor of Women’s Studies at Spelman College. Dwight A. McBride is the Gerald Early Distinguished Professor of African & African American Studies at Washington University of in St. Louis. Justin A. Joyce is a senior publications editor and a managing editor of the James Baldwin Review and a senior publications editor at Washington University in St. Louis.

Cuprins

“Whom did they love?” An Introduction—Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Dwight A. McBride, and Justin A. Joyce

KEY FIGURES REVISITED
• Robert F. Reid-Pharr, Monster in the Archive
• Devon W. Carbado and Donald Weise, The Civil Rights Identity of Bayard Rustin
• Timothy Stewart-Winter, The Killing of James Clay and the Archives of Police Violence
• Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Coretta Scott King: The Beloved Community Revisited

BELOVED COMMUNITY: LOVE, ARTS, ACTION
• E. Patrick Johnson, “Are We Not Family?”: Sexuality, Citizenship, and Politics in the New Black South
• Cheryl Clark, Morning, Mourning, and Mo’nin’ in Audre Lorde’s “Sister, Morning Is a Time for Miracles”
• Rudolph P. Byrd, The Death of the Essential Black Subject: Marlon T. Riggs’ Black Is . . . Black Ain’t
• Marlon Rachquel Moore, Negative Visibility and the Privacy Ethic: James Baldwin’s Homophile Rhetoric

ANNALS OF EDUCATION
• Ruby Nell Sales, Their Goodness Followed Their Horizons’ Rim: Southern African American Lesbians in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries
• Dwight A. McBride, Straight Black Studies: On African American Studies, James Baldwin, and Black Queer Studies
• Roderick A. Ferguson, The Past and Future Diversities of HBCUs: Queerness and the Institutional Fulfillment of Black Studies
• Anthony Pinder, Lost in Reverie: Gay HBCU Alumni Look Back

LEAVE SIGNS: PHILOSOPHIES FOR THE FUTURE
• Gary L. Lemons, Professing Womanism as “a Sexual Discourse of Resistance” in and outside the College Classroom
• Deva R. Woodly, Political Philosophy: Radical Black Feminist Pragmatism
• Heath Fogg Davis, Sex-Classification Policies as Transgender Discrimination: An Intersectional Critique
• Jewelle Gomez, And Leave Signs—Art, Lineage, and Legacy