The Souths in Her: Black Women Writers and Choreographers and the Poetics of Transmutation

Nicole M. Morris Johnson
Columbia University Press

Since the Middle Passage, the intellectual and physical freedom of Black women in the United States and the Caribbean has been constrained. Yet Black women writers, artists, choreographers, and performers have contested pervasive political, cultural, and discursive silencing by drawing on the traditions and creative visions of multiple Souths: the Southern United States and the Caribbean, as well as Africa.

In The Souths in Her—a phrase borrowed from Ntozake Shange—Nicole M. Morris Johnson shows how key Black women artists transformed the enclosing narrative frames imposed on them, developing new forms of creative expression informed by the lived experiences and submerged histories of women across the Africana southern world.

Read more at Columbia University Press

Buy from Bookshop.org

Previous
Previous

Fugitive Tilts: Essays

Next
Next

Entangled Alliances: Racialized Freedom and Atlantic Diplomacy During the American Revolution