This publication is presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Duke University Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
15 Miracle in East New York
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- Introduction 1
-
PART I. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL: 1989 THROUGH 2001
- 1 Whose Town? Questioning Community and Identity 81
- 2 Places I’ve Lived 85
- 3 Engaging and Escaping in 1994 88
- 4 To Hell and Back: On the Road with Black Feminism in the ’60s and ’70s 95
- 5 Censorship and Self-Censorship 111
- 6 An Interview 114
-
PART II. MASS CULTURE AND POPULAR JOURNALISM
- 7 Watching Arsenio 127
- 8 Black Stereotypes in Hollywood Films: ‘‘I Don’t Know Nothin’ ’Bout Birthin’ No Babies!’’ 130
- 9 When Black Feminism Faces the Music, and the Music Is Rap 134
- 10 Storytellers: The Thomas–Hill Affair 138
- 11 Talking about the Gulf 141
- 12 Beyond Assimilation 144
- 13 ‘‘Why Women Won’t Relate to ‘Justice’ ’’: Losing Her Voice 147
- 14 For Whom the Bell Tolls: Why Americans Can’t Deal with Black Feminist Intellectuals 149
- 15 Miracle in East New York 161
-
PART III. NEW YORK POSTMODERNISM AND BLACK CULTURAL STUDIES
- 16 The Politics of Location: Cinema/Theory/Literature/ Ethnicity/Sexuality/Me 167
- 17 Black Feminist Criticism: A Politics of Location and Beloved 179
- 18 Why Are There No Great Black Artists? The Problem of Visuality in African American Culture 184
- 19 High Mass 195
- 20 Symposium on Political Correctness 197
- 21 The Culture War within the Culture Wars 202
- 22 Boyz N the Hood and Jungle Fever 215
-
PART IV. MULTICULTURALISM IN THE ARTS
- 23 Race, Gender, and Psychoanalysis in Forties Films 223
- 24 Multicultural Blues: An Interview with Michele Wallace 238
- 25 Multiculturalism and Oppositionality 249
- 26 Black Women in Popular Culture: From Stereotype to Heroine 264
- 27 The Search for the Good Enough Mammy: Multiculturalism, Popular Culture, and Psychoanalysis 275
-
PART V. HENRY LOUIS GATES AND AFRICAN AMERICAN POSTSTRUCTURALISM
- 28 Henry Louis Gates: A Race Man and a Scholar 289
- 29 If You Can’t Join ’Em, Beat ’Em: Stanley Crouch and Shaharazad Ali 297
- 30 Let’s Get Serious: Marching with the Million 309
- 31 Out of Step with the Million Man March 311
- 32 Neither Fish nor Fowl: The Crisis of African American Gender Relations 314
- 33 The Problem with Black Masculinity and Celebrity 318
- 34 The Fame Game 324
- 35 Skip Gates’s Africa 328
-
PART VI. QUEER THEORY AND VISUAL CULTURE
- 36 Defacing History 339
- 37 When Dream Girls Grow Old 353
- 38 The French Collection 357
- 39 Modernism, Postmodernism, and the Problem of the Visual in Afro-American Culture 364
- 40 A Fierce Flame: Marlon Riggs 379
- 41 ‘‘Harlem on My Mind’’ 382
- 42 Questions on Feminism 386
- 43 Feminism, Race, and the Division of Labor 390
- 44 Doin’ the Right Thing: Ten Years after She’s Gotta Have It 401
- 45 The Gap Alternative 410
- 46 Art on My Mind 417
- 47 Pictures Can Lie 422
- 48 The Hottentot Venus 426
- 49 Angels in America, Paris Is Burning, and Queer Theory 430
- 50 Toshi Reagon’s Birthday 454
- 51 Cheryl Dunye: Sexin’ the Watermelon 457
- 52 The Prison House of Culture: Why African Art? Why the Guggenheim? Why Now? 460
- 53 Black Female Spectatorship 474
- 54 Bamboozled: The Archive 486
- Index 495
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- Introduction 1
-
PART I. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL: 1989 THROUGH 2001
- 1 Whose Town? Questioning Community and Identity 81
- 2 Places I’ve Lived 85
- 3 Engaging and Escaping in 1994 88
- 4 To Hell and Back: On the Road with Black Feminism in the ’60s and ’70s 95
- 5 Censorship and Self-Censorship 111
- 6 An Interview 114
-
PART II. MASS CULTURE AND POPULAR JOURNALISM
- 7 Watching Arsenio 127
- 8 Black Stereotypes in Hollywood Films: ‘‘I Don’t Know Nothin’ ’Bout Birthin’ No Babies!’’ 130
- 9 When Black Feminism Faces the Music, and the Music Is Rap 134
- 10 Storytellers: The Thomas–Hill Affair 138
- 11 Talking about the Gulf 141
- 12 Beyond Assimilation 144
- 13 ‘‘Why Women Won’t Relate to ‘Justice’ ’’: Losing Her Voice 147
- 14 For Whom the Bell Tolls: Why Americans Can’t Deal with Black Feminist Intellectuals 149
- 15 Miracle in East New York 161
-
PART III. NEW YORK POSTMODERNISM AND BLACK CULTURAL STUDIES
- 16 The Politics of Location: Cinema/Theory/Literature/ Ethnicity/Sexuality/Me 167
- 17 Black Feminist Criticism: A Politics of Location and Beloved 179
- 18 Why Are There No Great Black Artists? The Problem of Visuality in African American Culture 184
- 19 High Mass 195
- 20 Symposium on Political Correctness 197
- 21 The Culture War within the Culture Wars 202
- 22 Boyz N the Hood and Jungle Fever 215
-
PART IV. MULTICULTURALISM IN THE ARTS
- 23 Race, Gender, and Psychoanalysis in Forties Films 223
- 24 Multicultural Blues: An Interview with Michele Wallace 238
- 25 Multiculturalism and Oppositionality 249
- 26 Black Women in Popular Culture: From Stereotype to Heroine 264
- 27 The Search for the Good Enough Mammy: Multiculturalism, Popular Culture, and Psychoanalysis 275
-
PART V. HENRY LOUIS GATES AND AFRICAN AMERICAN POSTSTRUCTURALISM
- 28 Henry Louis Gates: A Race Man and a Scholar 289
- 29 If You Can’t Join ’Em, Beat ’Em: Stanley Crouch and Shaharazad Ali 297
- 30 Let’s Get Serious: Marching with the Million 309
- 31 Out of Step with the Million Man March 311
- 32 Neither Fish nor Fowl: The Crisis of African American Gender Relations 314
- 33 The Problem with Black Masculinity and Celebrity 318
- 34 The Fame Game 324
- 35 Skip Gates’s Africa 328
-
PART VI. QUEER THEORY AND VISUAL CULTURE
- 36 Defacing History 339
- 37 When Dream Girls Grow Old 353
- 38 The French Collection 357
- 39 Modernism, Postmodernism, and the Problem of the Visual in Afro-American Culture 364
- 40 A Fierce Flame: Marlon Riggs 379
- 41 ‘‘Harlem on My Mind’’ 382
- 42 Questions on Feminism 386
- 43 Feminism, Race, and the Division of Labor 390
- 44 Doin’ the Right Thing: Ten Years after She’s Gotta Have It 401
- 45 The Gap Alternative 410
- 46 Art on My Mind 417
- 47 Pictures Can Lie 422
- 48 The Hottentot Venus 426
- 49 Angels in America, Paris Is Burning, and Queer Theory 430
- 50 Toshi Reagon’s Birthday 454
- 51 Cheryl Dunye: Sexin’ the Watermelon 457
- 52 The Prison House of Culture: Why African Art? Why the Guggenheim? Why Now? 460
- 53 Black Female Spectatorship 474
- 54 Bamboozled: The Archive 486
- Index 495