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When we imagine grace : black men and subject making

Title
When we imagine grace : black men and subject making / Simone C. Drake.
ISBN
9780226363837
022636383X
9780226363974
022636397X
9780226364025
Publication
Chicago ; London : The University of Chicago Press, 2016.
Physical Description
xviii, 250 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Summary
Simone C. Drake spent the first several decades of her life learning how to love and protect herself, a black woman, from the systems designed to facilitate her harm and marginalization. But when she gave birth to the first of her three sons, she quickly learned that black boys would need protection from these very same systems systems dead set on the static, homogenous representations of black masculinity perpetuated in the media and our cultural discourse. In When We Imagine Grace, Drake borrows from Toni Morrison's Beloved to bring imagination to the center of black masculinity studies allowing individual black men to exempt themselves and their fates from a hateful, ignorant society and open themselves up as active agents at the center of their own stories. Against a backdrop of crisis, Drake brings forth the narratives of black men who have imagined grace for themselves. We meet African American cowboy, Nat Love, and Drake's own grandfather, who served in the first black military unit to fight in World War II. Synthesizing black feminist and black masculinity studies, Drake analyzes black fathers and daughters, the valorization of black criminals, the denigration and celebration of gay men, Cornelius Eady, Antoine Dodson, and Kehinde Wiley.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
May 03, 2017
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Navigating discourses of crisis
A friend of my mind, or where I enter
Nat love: a new patronymic
Lest we forget: stories my grandfather told me
Deliver us from evil: black family hauntings in a neoliberal state
Twisted criminalities: contradictory black heroism
"I'm not a businessman, I'm a business": a hip-hop
Genealogy of black entrepreneurship
Epilogue: black boys making sense of race.
Citation

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