Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) S. Pinto , J.C. Nash
ANO 2020
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Public Culture
ISSN 0899-2363
E-ISSN 1527-8018
EDITORA Publisher 15297
DOI 10.1215/08992363-8358686
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18

Resumo

This paper sits with the understudied subgenre of the contemporary black maternal memoir in the Black Lives Matter era. We read Sybrina Fulton and Tracy Martin's Rest in Power: The Enduring Life of Trayvon Martin and Lezley McSpadden's Tell the Truth and Shame the Devil: The Life, Legacy, and Love of My Son Michael Brown not only as performances of grief and of the birth of political subjectivity—even as they emphatically stage how respectable black maternal political subjectivity is born through loss. These black maternal memoirs also offer what we call strange intimacies, which strain the predictable scripts of the maternal memoir. We read the embeddedness of strange intimacies in these memoirs as a way of refusing the gendered logics of the reception of the black maternal, and as performances of intimacy that refuse and undo normative conceptions of familial intimacy and black maternal loss.

Ferramentas