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46 Black Feminist Literary Methods

  • Shawntal Z. Brown (she/her) is a scholar-practitioner whose research and professional practice intersect university leadership, organizational change, and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). She earned her PhD in Educational Leadership and Policy from the University of Texas at Austin, where her dissertation employed a multi-theoretical framework to examine presidential leadership and the politics of DEI in higher education.599

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Abstract

The study of geography, especially feminist geography, has not always centered Blackness, or Black women. The Black geographic methodological approach (re)‌centers Blackness as a unit of analysis to explore the depth and complexity of Black humanity. As such, this chapter focuses on the novel, Beloved (1987) by author Toni Morrison as a literary analysis to explore the protagonist, Sethe, a formerly enslaved woman and her experiences at Sweet Home Plantation and life as a freed woman navigating Black trauma and grief. Through a Black feminist geographic method, this literary analysis highlights the complexities of Black livelihood through Black emotionality (e. g., Black pain, trauma, death, pleasure, joy, and happiness).

Abstract

The study of geography, especially feminist geography, has not always centered Blackness, or Black women. The Black geographic methodological approach (re)‌centers Blackness as a unit of analysis to explore the depth and complexity of Black humanity. As such, this chapter focuses on the novel, Beloved (1987) by author Toni Morrison as a literary analysis to explore the protagonist, Sethe, a formerly enslaved woman and her experiences at Sweet Home Plantation and life as a freed woman navigating Black trauma and grief. Through a Black feminist geographic method, this literary analysis highlights the complexities of Black livelihood through Black emotionality (e. g., Black pain, trauma, death, pleasure, joy, and happiness).

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