Full Description
Inside the Body of Black Feminism charts a cultural genealogy of anti-racist and feminist engagement with some of the most objectified internal "parts" of racist medical and scientific inquiry: bones and blood, brains and hearts, wombs and guts. In a move counterintuitive to Black feminism's emphasis on externalized representations of the body, Samantha Pinto reinterprets the relationship between embodiment, health, and race through cultural archives that reimagine the inside of the Black body. Working through materials such as medical textbooks, memoirs, data visualizations, museum displays, speculative fiction, and horror films, Pinto explores how a visually inaccessible corporeal interior becomes discernable and racialized in the public sphere. Inside the Body of Black Feminism engages expressive cultural work to ask how we might know the inside of the black body differently through Black feminist theory and how scientific and medical inquiry might enable us to understand political subjectivity anew.
Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. Material and Metaphor 1
Part I. Bones and Blood: Black Feminist Thought and the Interior Infrastructures of History
1. Bones: Black Feminism and the Metaphor of History 25
2. Blood: Your Mother's Hematology 47
Part II. Brains and Hearts: Reimagining the Pedagogies of Dissent
3. Brains: Thinking Reparation and the Antiracist Cure 77
4. Hearts: Reading Racial Feeling and the Politics of Circulation 95
Part III. Guts and Wombs: Black Feminism after Autonomy
5. Guts: Metabolizing Racial Violence, Making the Black Feminist Self 119
6. Wombs: Reproducing Black Feminism and the Knot of Autonomy 145
Conclusion. Tender: On Black Feminist Method 169
Notes 173
Bibliography 185
Index



