Performative Intergenerational Dialogues of a Black Quartet

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A Black Quartet
A01=Bryant Keith Alexander
A01=Dominique C. Hill
A01=Durell M. Callier
A01=Mary E. Weems
African American English
anti-Black violence narratives
Author_Bryant Keith Alexander
Author_Dominique C. Hill
Author_Durell M. Callier
Author_Mary E. Weems
Autoethnographic Vignettes
Baltimore City
Black activism
Black community
Black femininity
Black Gay Men
Black masculinity
Black Methods
Black Notes
Black Playwrights
Black scholarship
Black sexualities
Black studies
Brotha Wit
Bryant Keith Alexander
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College Professor
Coon Show
Cultural Cosmologies
Dominique C. Hill
Durell M. Callier
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Fourth Grade Education
Gender studies
Grandma
Intergenerational Dialogues
intersectionality
Mary E. Weems
Mason Jar
memory and resistance
Motha Wit
performance ethnography
Performance Studies
Persona
Powerful Cultural Institutions
Qualitative Inquiries
Qualitative Inquiry
qualitative methodologies
Qualitative performance
research methods in performance studies
Roadside Memorials
social justice activism
Tattoos
Wo
Wooden Nickels
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032228167
  • Weight: 820g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Jul 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Performative Intergenerational Dialogues of a Black Quartet promotes the importance of intergenerational Black dialogue as a collaborative spirit-making across race, genders, sexualities, and cultures to bridge time and space.

The authors enter this dialogue in a crisis moment: a crisis moment at the confluence of a pandemic, the national political transition of leadership in the United States, the necessary rise of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color activism—in the face of the continued murders of unarmed Black and queer people by police. And as each author mourns the loss of loved ones who have left us through illness, the contiguity of time, or murder, we all hold tight to each other and to memory as an act of keeping them alive in our hearts and actions, remembrance as an act of resistance so that the circle will be unbroken. But they also come together in the spirit of hope, the hope that bleeds the borders between generations of Black teacher-artist-scholars, the hope that we find in each other’s joy and laughter, and the hope that comes when we hear both stories of struggle and strife and stories of celebration and smile that lead to possibilities and potentialities of our collective being and becoming—as a people.

So, the authors offer stories of witness, resistance, and gettin’ ovah, stories that serve as a road map from Black history and heritage to a Black futurity that is mythic and imagined but that can also be actualized and embodied, now. This book will be of interest to scholars, students, and activists in a wide range of disciplines across the social sciences and performance studies.

Bryant Keith Alexander is a professor and dean in the College of Communication and Fine Arts and an interim dean in the School of Film and Television at Loyola Marymount University, USA. He is coauthor of Still Hanging: Using Performance Texts to Deconstrict Racism and Collaborative Spirit-Writing and Performance in Everyday Black Lives.

Mary E. Weems is a poet, playwright, scholar, and author of 14 books, including Blackeyed: Plays and Monologues and five chapbooks. Weems was awarded a 2015 Cleveland Arts Prize for her full-length drama MEAT and has also been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. She is coauthor of Still Hanging: Using Performance Texts to Deconstrict Racism and Collaborative Spirit-Writing and Performance in Everyday Black Lives. Weems may be reached at www.maryeweems.org.

Dominque C. Hill, PhD, is a creative and vulnerability guide whose scholarship interrogates Black embodiment with foci in Black girlhood, education, and performance. An artist-scholar, Hill is an assistant professor of Women’s Studies at Colgate University and is the coauthor of Who look at me?!: Shifting the Gaze of Education Through Blackness, Queerness, and the Body.

Durell M. Callier, PhD, is an associate professor in the Department of Educational Leadership at Miami University. An artist-scholar, he researches and interrogates the lived experience of Black youth and the racialized queer dynamics of power within educative spaces. He is coauthor of Who look at me?!: Shifting the Gaze of Education Through Blackness, Queerness, and the Body.

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