"In this innovative, interdisciplinary collection of essays, Downs, Morgan, and Brier update the insights and methods of intersectionality for a new generation of scholars whose questions interrogate the heteronormative and racial practices that have marginalized black female and queer historical subjects."--Kathleen Brown, author of Foul Bodies: Cleanliness in Early America "This is a timely and important volume that encourages temporal conversations about the intersection of race and sexuality. The essays are bold and thought provoking and consider underexplored areas of historical inquiry. The editors and contributors should be commended for doing a superb job of drawing connections over three centuries, thereby inviting readers to critically interrogate this contested history. The multi-disciplinary scope of this anthology will generate a body of new scholarship in the field of race, gender, and sexuality studies."--Daina Ramey Berry, author of Swing the Sickle for the Harvest Is Ripe: Gender and Slavery in Antebellum Georgia This volume takes its readers on a sweeping journey from American plantations to the U.S. Supreme Court, from southern households to brothels in Barbados, from the Bible to the Silver Screen, from college campuses in the 1950s to mass marches in the 1990s, and from journal entries to African American popular print magazines to propose new methodologies to more deeply understand the vexed relationships between race, gender, class, and sexuality.
At each turn, the authors urge readers to reconsider the roles of fantasy and history in the construction of beauty, same-sex desire and relationships, kinship, and property. This collection's greatest achievement is to broaden readers' approaches to intersectional identities and to enable readers to re-imagine the humanity of the actors in this volume.--Allyson Hobbs, author of A Chosen Exile: A History of Racial Passing in American Life.