In the (After) Life: Tracing Black Queer Spatialities Under Regimes of Displacement, 1963-1989- [electronic resource]
In the (After) Life: Tracing Black Queer Spatialities Under Regimes of Displacement, 1963-1989- [electronic resource]
- 자료유형
- 학위논문파일 국외
- 최종처리일시
- 20240214095901
- ISBN
- 9798380619530
- DDC
- 305
- 저자명
- Lync, Kerby.
- 서명/저자
- In the (After) Life: Tracing Black Queer Spatialities Under Regimes of Displacement, 1963-1989 - [electronic resource]
- 발행사항
- [S.l.]: : University of California, Berkeley., 2021
- 발행사항
- Ann Arbor : : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses,, 2021
- 형태사항
- 1 online resource(117 p.)
- 주기사항
- Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-04, Section: A.
- 주기사항
- Advisor: Summers, Brandi.
- 학위논문주기
- Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Berkeley, 2021.
- 사용제한주기
- This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
- 초록/해제
- 요약"In the (After) Life: Tracing Black Queer Spatialities under Regimes of Displacement, 1963- 1989" is a dissertation that explores emotional geographies found within the artistic works of Black Queer cultural producers who witnessed and produced art in a context of Black mass displacement. Informed by the burgeoning field of Black Geographies, "In the (After) Life" comprises chapters that use archival research and narrative inquiry to analyze how madness and abjection constitute the Black Queer urban subject's everyday spatial practice. This dissertation will explore the notes and warnings of Black Queer cultural producers who speak intimately to the process of urban renewal as producing a structured otherness in real space-time. This dissertation will analyze these experiences of abjection from James Baldwin's Take This Hammer (1963), Pat Parker's Jonestown and Other Madness (1984), and Marlon Riggs' Tongues Untied (1989). Primarily drawing from approaches in Queer of Color Critique, Critical Human Geographies, and Black Studies, "In the (After) Life" explores the term "Archive of Black Queer Spatialities" as a reference for Black Queer subjects creating a spatial response to displacement across multiple waves of urban restructuring in San Francisco. This dissertation closely reads the long history of urban renewal and the various forms that have taken place across the 20th century that has produced emotional geographies of abjection. These affective geographies have material consequences that this dissertation explores: neighborhood isolation, premature death, and mass criminalization. Ultimately, "In the (After) Life" provides a socio-spatial approach to reading anti-Blackness in the built environment of San Francisco.
- 일반주제명
- Urban planning.
- 일반주제명
- LGBTQ studies.
- 일반주제명
- Geography.
- 키워드
- San Francisco
- 기타저자
- University of California, Berkeley Geography
- 기본자료저록
- Dissertations Abstracts International. 85-04A.
- 기본자료저록
- Dissertation Abstract International
- 전자적 위치 및 접속
- 로그인 후 원문을 볼 수 있습니다.