The Black Reproductive: Unfree Labor and Insurgent Motherhood

The Black Reproductive: Unfree Labor and Insurgent Motherhood

by Sara Clarke Kaplan
The Black Reproductive: Unfree Labor and Insurgent Motherhood

The Black Reproductive: Unfree Labor and Insurgent Motherhood

by Sara Clarke Kaplan

Paperback

$27.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

How Black women’s reproduction became integral to white supremacy, capitalism, and heteropatriarchy—and remains key to their dismantling

In the United States, slavery relied on the reproduction and other labors of unfree Black women. Nearly four centuries later, Black reproductivity remains a vital technology for the creation, negotiation, and transformation of sexualized and gendered racial categories. Yet even as Black reproduction has been deployed to resolve the conflicting demands of white supremacy, capitalism, and heteropatriarchy, Sara Clarke Kaplan argues that it also holds the potential to destabilize the oppressive systems it is supposed to maintain.

The Black Reproductive convenes Black literary and cultural studies with feminist and queer theory to read twentieth- and twenty-first-century texts and images alongside their pre-emancipation counterparts. These provocative, unexpected couplings include how Toni Morrison’s depiction of infanticide regenders Orlando Patterson’s theory of social death, and how Mary Prince’s eighteenth-century fugitive slave narrative is resignified through the representational paradoxes of Gayl Jones’s blues novel Corregidora. Throughout, Kaplan offers new perspectives on Black motherhood and gendered labor, from debates over the relationship between President Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, to the demise of racist icon Aunt Jemima, to discussions of Black reproductive freedom and abortion. 

The Black Reproductive gives vital insight into the historic and ongoing conditions of Black unfreedom, and points to the possibilities for a Black feminist practice of individual and collective freedom.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780816695690
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Publication date: 06/08/2021
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Sara Clarke Kaplan is associate professor of ethnic studies and critical gender studies at the University of California, San Diego, and cofounder of UCSD’s Black Studies Project. Her writing has been published in a number of journals, including American Quarterly, American Literary History, Callaloo, and the Journal of Black Women, Gender, and Families

Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction: Toward a Black Feminist Politics of Freedom

1. Ain’t Your Mama on the Pancake Box?: Aunt Jemima and the Reproduction of the Racial State

2. Love and Violence/Maternity and Death: Enslaved Infanticide and Monstrous Motherhood in Toni Morrison’s Beloved

3. Hysterical Bodies as Embodied History: Corregidora’s Genealogy of Resistance

4. Our Founding (M)Other: Sally Hemings and the Problem of Miscegenation

5. “A Picture of Me and my Mother”: Planned Parenthood, Precious, and the Rationalization of Black Reproductivity

Coda: Lest We Forget: A Litany for Survival

Acknowledgments

Notes

Index

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews