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The Black Body in Ecstasy: Reading Race, Reading Pornography PDF

230 Pages·2014·1.091 MB·English
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THE BLACK BODY IN ECSTASY Next Wave: NeW DirectioNs iN WomeN’s stuDies A series edited by Inderpal Grewal, Caren Kaplan, and Robyn Wiegman THE BLACK BODY IN ECSTASY / JENNIFER C. NASH Reading Race, Reading Pornography     Duke uNiversity Press Durham aND LoNDoN 2014 © 2014 Duke University Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America on acid- free paper ♾ Designed by Amy Ruth Buchanan Typeset in Quadraat by Tseng Information Systems, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data Nash, Jennifer C., 1980– The Black body in ecstasy : reading race, reading pornography / Jennifer C. Nash. pages cm — (Next wave) Includes bibliographical references and index. isbN 978- 0- 8223- 5605- 9 (cloth : alk. paper) isbN 978- 0- 8223- 5620- 2 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Pornography—Social aspects—United States. 2. African American women in motion pictures. 3. African American women—Sexual behavior. I. Title. II. Series: Next wave. PN1995.9.N4N36 2014 791.43′652996073—dc23 2013026381 CONTENTS Acknowledgments vii Introduction 1 Reading Race, Reading Pornography 1 / Archives of Pain 27 Reading the Black Feminist Theoretical Archive 2 / Speaking Sex / Speaking Race 59 Lialeh and the Blax- porn- tation Aesthetic 3 / Race- Pleasures 83 Sexworld and the Ecstatic Black Female Body 4 / Laughing Matters 107 Race- Humor on the Pornographic Screen 5 / On Refusal 128 Racial Promises and the Silver Age Screen Conclusion 146 Reading Ecstasy Notes 153 Bibliography 181 Index 213 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This book began as a dissertation directed by a committee of “courage- teachers”—to borrow from Allen Ginsberg—who generously supported the labor of imagination and leaps of faith required to complete this proj- ect. Werner Sollors is courage-t eacher extraordinaire. He championed this project before it was even a project, offered thoughtful suggestions on numerous drafts, and encouraged me to write fearlessly. I will always be grateful for his support. Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham has been teacher, advisor, and generous mentor; she consistently raised the intellectual bar, pushing me to produce better work. She is my model for scholarly integrity and academic rigor. Kim McClain DaCosta helped me focus on the things that matter, and encouraged me let go of the things that don’t. I thank her for insights on how to refine these chapters and—perhaps more impor- tant—on how to navigate the academy with sanity and a modicum of grace. This project was also shaped by my undergraduate thesis advisor, Danielle Egan, who seemed to see this moment long before I did. She introduced me to theory, encouraged me to “use my voice,” and taught me how to think critically and creatively about pornography. Everything that has happened in my intellectual life since my senior year of college bears her imprint. While finishing this project, I had two other very important courage- teachers: Sarah Tannenbaum and Darshan Krishna. Sarah’s swimming lessons got me out of my head (and into the water) at the time I needed it most. She introduced me to what I now consider one of life’s greatest plea- sures, never lost her patience when I tried to talk my way out of a Super 500, and encouraged me to be fearless. Darshan- ji’s Hindi lessons got me back into my head in an unexpectedly delightful way, and introduced me to the pleasures of chalak bunder stories. Both of them taught me to cele- brate playfulness, to embrace new adventures, and to be open to the small mistakes that are part of learning. This project also owes its existence to the host of institutions that offered me time, space, and resources to research and to write. My first debt is to my fantastic graduate department, African and African Ameri- can Studies at Harvard University, and to the faculty and graduate stu- dents who made it a collegial, vibrant, and fun intellectual community. Thanks also to Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Harvard Col- lege; the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University; the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research; the Woodrow Wilson Women’s Studies Fellowship; Columbia University So- ciety of Fellows in the Humanities; and George Washington University’s Columbian College. Thanks to my supportive colleagues in the American Studies and Women’s Studies departments at George Washington Uni- versity. I owe special thanks to Tom Guglielmo and Suleiman Osman for friendship and mentorship, and to Libby Anker for her generous and en- couraging feedback on many drafts. This project also owes so much to Duke University Press, especially to Ken Wissoker, Leigh Barnwell, Eliza- beth Ault, and the two reviewers who posed insightful and challenging questions that pushed me in important ways. Thanks to Robyn Wiegman for encouragement, and Nicole Fleetwood for boundless intellectual gen- erosity. Many of the ideas that are contained in these pages were first tried out in the classroom. Thank you to my students at Harvard, Columbia, and George Washington. The time that we spend making imaginative leaps and diving into theory reminds me why I do this work. I owe a special thanks to my very first students who taught me how to teach: Shawna Strayhorn, Emily Owens, Tracie Palmer, Sarah Howard, and Vanessa Pratt. I think back on our times together—sipping tea in the Gato and talking feminist theory—with immense fondness. Amber Musser and Elena Marx helped make this project what it is. They viii / Acknowledgments kindly waded through my endless pages of literature review and foot- notes, and helped me locate the story that I wanted to tell. I owe Amber endless thanks for friendship, intellectual companionship, and smart feedback; she is often my first reader, and I am grateful for how she asks hard questions while generously supporting my ideas. I also owe thanks to an amazing group of friends whose kindness sustains me: Peter Geller, Emily Owens, Deb Cohan, Amy Hesse Siniscalchi, Katie Rademacher, Laura Murphy, Brandi Thompson Summers, and Alex and Whitney Van Praagh (and the trio of smaller Van Praaghs). Thanks to family: Naseem and Ameer Ahmad welcomed this “Ameri- can girl” into their clan with tremendous affection, and introduced me to the pleasures of finger chips, salty lime sodas at the Club, and biscuits from the Petrol Pump Shop. Ken Clinton has always made time to cele- brate life’s important events with me, and I am forever grateful. Jonathan Evans has showered me with supportive e-m ails over the course of com- pleting this project, and has kindly forgiven me for the many summer afternoons I followed him around insistently asking, “Who’s Pete?” My elders taught me so much about perseverance, courage, and the importance of faith in something beyond the self. Though they aren’t here anymore, I carry their stories, their affection, and their wisdom with me as I move through the world. Thanks to my great-g randmother, Mae Thompson; my grandfathers, Maurice Eastmond and Alfred Nash; and my grandmothers, Christine Eastmond and Parthenia Nash. I owe a special thanks to Maurice Eastmond, my Papa, who taught me that a life of ideas was possible. Though our intellectual interests couldn’t be more different, the completion of this project is in honor of the dissertation he began at Columbia University in the 1940s. Finally, thanks to the three who give me the most: My parents, Carolyn and Douglas Nash, are the most selfless people I know. They have given me the proverbial shirts off their backs more times than I can count. And for as long as I can remember, they have maintained an unshakable faith in me and in my capacity to do good things. They have been there to celebrate every piece of exciting news I’ve been fortu- nate enough to receive, and they have been there to help me dust myself off after every disappointment. They humble me with their kindness, they sustain me with their love, and I am forever grateful. (Dad, let me publicly say: I promise an extra copy for the ’chives.) Acknowledgments / ix

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