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Beautiful Bottom, Beautiful Shame: Where Black Meets Queer (Series Q)

by Kathryn Stockton, Michèle Barale (Series Editor), Jonathan Goldberg (Series Editor)

ISBN-10: 9780822337966
ISBN-10: 0-8223-3796-7
ISBN-13: 9780822337966
ISBN-13: 978-0-8223-3796-6
Paperback
2006
Duke University Press


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Editorials


Product Description
Shame, Kathryn Bond Stockton argues in Beautiful Bottom, Beautiful Shame, has often been a meeting place for the signs “black” and “queer” and for black and queer people—overlapping groups who have been publicly marked as degraded and debased. But when and why have certain forms of shame been embraced by blacks and queers? How does debasement foster attractions? How is it used for aesthetic delight? What does it offer for projects of sorrow and ways of creative historical knowing? How and why is it central to camp?

Stockton engages the domains of African American studies, queer theory, psychoanalysis, film theory, photography, semiotics, and gender studies. She brings together thinkers rarely, if ever, read together in a single study—James Baldwin, Radclyffe Hall, Jean Genet, Toni Morrison, Robert Mapplethorpe, Eldridge Cleaver, Todd Haynes, Norman Mailer, Leslie Feinberg, David Fincher, and Quentin Tarantino—and reads them with and against major theorists, including Georges Bataille, Sigmund Freud, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Jacques Lacan, Roland Barthes, and Leo Bersani. Stockton asserts that there is no clear, mirrored relation between the terms “black” and “queer”; rather, seemingly definitive associations attached to each are often taken up or crossed through by the other. Stockton explores dramatic switchpoints between these terms: the stigmatized “skin” of some queers’ clothes, the description of blacks as an “economic bottom,” the visual force of interracial homosexual rape, the complicated logic of so-called same-sex miscegenation, and the ways in which a famous depiction of slavery (namely, Morrison’s Beloved) seems bound up with depictions of AIDS. All of the thinkers Stockton considers scrutinize the social nature of shame as they examine the structures that make debasements possible, bearable, pleasurable, and creative, even in their darkness.


Reviews


Best book I've read this year
As with Kathryn Stockton's first book, God Between Their Lips, this book is highly articulate, intelligent, insightful, engaging, and thought-provoking. I highly recommend buying this book.

Good Stuff
What I love about Stockton's work is that it represents the cross section of theory, literature and art. The one thing that discourages me (often) with the study of literature is the horribly drab study of theory--one that seems to exclude the beauty of it all. However, here it is approached with a fresh eye and a fresh aspect.
Stockton looks at photography, cinema, literature etc. and does so in a way that will make you think differently about black queer studies. The influence from Kosofsky Sedgwick is obvious and complimentary.
I think it's easier for reviewers to hate this work simply because it dares to "think outside the box"...thank God!
Stockton's book is among the best (of the limited) black queer studies projects.

Queer Theory at its Best
I am completely baffled by the first review of this book which, unfortunately, paints a horrible picture of an incredibly provocative, fascinating, and very intelligent book. Stockton analyses different points in American cultural production (everything from Toni Morrison to Pulp Fiction) where the meanings attached to "queerness" become linked to the meanings normally surrounding "blackness" (and vice versa). By looking at how these two terms and their histories intersect, she makes an incredibly compelling case for the ways in which "bottom values" (everything connected to lower class status, "passive sexuality, etc.) have been assigned to both black and queer identities and how those values might be explored theoretically. Her chapter on Sula is one of the most impressive literary analyses I've ever encountered. This is cutting edge work in the fields of Queer Studies and African American Studies and anyone interested in these or related fields should definately read this.

Crazy babbling on senseless jibberish crapulation
The tis of what ever not is when not at the end of the silent contempt enforceable of which is to blame not tender at what, not but chatter con to what it truly is. If you understood this last sentence then this book is for you. But if you are normal like the rest of us then it is nothing more than meaningless gibberish and the ENTIRE book is full of it. I never seen anyone take a bunch of words and put them together in such meaningless fashion as this author did on this book. I thought it was on blacks, or maybe on gay bottoms, or maybe on the shame of homosexuality (if there is such thing), but NO. Just some crazy talk on nothing. I encourage you to please buy this book and see what I am talking about. A waste of paper, of space on my shelves (where there ARE good books), and a waste of my 22 dollars... I want not only a refund but for the author to pay me a million dollars for having to go thru all those pages of senseless free association. I did like the cover. Lesson learned: don't buy the book by its cover!


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