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Feels Right Kemi Adeyemi

Feels Right By Kemi Adeyemi

Feels Right by Kemi Adeyemi


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Summary

Kemi Adeyemi examines how Black queer women use the queer dance floor to articulate relationships to themselves, the Black queer community, and gentrifying neighborhoods in Chicago.

Feels Right Summary

Feels Right: Black Queer Women and the Politics of Partying in Chicago by Kemi Adeyemi

In Feels Right Kemi Adeyemi presents an ethnography of how black queer women in Chicago use dance to assert their physical and affective rights to the city. Adeyemi stages the book in queer dance parties in gentrifying neighborhoods, where good feelings are good business. But feeling good is elusive for black queer women whose nightlives are undercut by white people, heterosexuality, neoliberal capitalism, burnout, and other buzzkills. Adeyemi documents how black queer women respond to these conditions: how they destroy DJ booths, argue with one another, dance slowly, and stop partying altogether. Their practices complicate our expectations that life at night, on the queer dance floor, or among black queer community simply feels good. Adeyemis framework of feeling right instead offers a closer, kinesthetic look at how black queer women adroitly manage feeling itself as a complex right they should be afforded in cities that violently structure their movements and energies. What emerges in Feels Right is a sensorial portrait of the critical, black queer geographies and collectivities that emerge in social dance settings and in the broader neoliberal city.

Duke University Press Scholars of Color First Book Award recipient

Feels Right Reviews

Adeyemis rich ethnographic observations on Black queer womens parties in Chicago demonstrate why the dance floor is much more than just a utopian promise of happiness within a hostile socio-political environment. . . . Through dancing and choreography, queerness is not only performed but also learned and experienced by people who may not have encountered it before. -- Yener Bayramoglu * Ethnic and Racial Studies *

"What is innovative about Adeyemis text ... is that she carves out a scholarly field that reflects her interest in queer nightlife in the most expansive definition of the phrase. ...Feels Right is a political project that aims to drive many Black queer women to return to nightlife even if their pleasure is contested on the dance floor and in the city."

-- Marietta Kosma * European Journal of American Studies *
This book will be invaluable to anyone working in feminist studies, queer studies, performance studies, Black studies, and Black geographies. -- Naz Oktay * Lateral *
"Scholars interested in topics of geography and space making, queer and Black politics, and queer theory will find Feels Right particularly appealing. . . . Throughout Feels Right, Adeyemi presents essential questions about queer nightlife, neoliberal politics, ordinary affects, mobility throughout city spaces (and academia), and experiences of burnout within radical politics and research." -- Jordan C. Grasso * GLQ *

About Kemi Adeyemi

Kemi Adeyemi is Associate Professor of Gender, Women and Sexuality Studies at the University of Washington and coeditor of Queer Nightlife.

Table of Contents

Preface ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1
1. Slo Mo and the Pace of Black Queer Life 39
2. Wheres the Joy in Accountability? Black Joy at Its Limits 62
3. Ordinary E N E R G Y 96
Conclusion: An Oral History of the Future of Burnout 120
Notes 143
Bibliography 159
Index 171

Additional information

NGR9781478018698
9781478018698
1478018690
Feels Right: Black Queer Women and the Politics of Partying in Chicago by Kemi Adeyemi
New
Paperback
Duke University Press
2022-09-30
192
N/A
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