C. Riley Snorton

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C. Riley Snorton


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C. Riley Snorton is associate professor of Africana studies and feminist, gender, and sexuality studies at Cornell University and visiting associate professor of American studies and ethnicity at the University of Southern California. He is author of Nobody Is Supposed to Know: Black Sexuality on the Down Low (Minnesota, 2014).

Average rating: 4.0 · 1,089 ratings · 189 reviews · 9 distinct worksSimilar authors
Black on Both Sides: A Raci...

4.01 avg rating — 1,040 ratings — published 2017 — 9 editions
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Nobody Is Supposed to Know:...

3.71 avg rating — 41 ratings — published 2014 — 5 editions
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Saturation: Race, Art, and ...

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Homofiles: Theory, Sexualit...

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2.33 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2011 — 6 editions
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A Black Queer History of th...

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GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian a...

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GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian a...

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The Flesh of the Matter: A ...

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Palimpsest Volume #2, Issue...

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“[P]assing expresses a form of agency as well as a promise of restoration, which is to say that passing—as a limited durational performance—signals a “return” to a natural-cum-biological mode of being. This narratological strategy shaped how passing would be deployed as an interpretive frame for all manners of trans-identificatory practices—both contemporaneously and reiteratively into the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.

No less performative but lacking a clear biologized semiotic referent, fungibility in this chapter expresses how ungendered blackness provided the grounds for (trans) performances for freedom. By describing their acts as performances for rather than of freedom, I am suggesting that the figures under review here illustrate how the inhabitation of the un-gender-specific and fungible also mapped the affective grounds for imagining other qualities of life and being for those marked by and for captivity. Brent/Jacobs referred to this vexed affective geography as “some- thing akin to freedom” that, perhaps paradoxically, required a “deliberate calculation” of one’s fungible status. Rather than regarding Jones, Waters, Jacobs, and the Crafts as recoverable trans figures in the archive, this chapter examines how the ungendering of blackness became a site of fugitive maneuvers wherein the dichotomized and collapsed designations of male-man-masculine and female-woman-feminine remained open—that is fungible—and the black’s figurative capacity to change form as a commoditized being engendered flow.”
C Riley Snorton

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