Royce Hall 306
CA 90095
This talk asks how we can understand black female masochism--the willful and desired submission to another. Masochism is a difficult subject to broach, but black female masochism is even more so because it threatens to produce subjects who embrace myriad systems of historical and cultural forms of objectification. Further, black female masochism is difficult to theorize because masochism as a concept requires an understanding of agency, which has been elusive for black women to claim. Through a reading of some of Kara Walker's work, this talk looks at how we have traditionally understood black female sexuality and female sexual passivity to think about the ways that discourses of race and sexuality converge and diverge.
Amber Jamilla Musser is Assistant Professor of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Washington University in St. Louis. She received her PhD in History of Science in 2009 from Harvard University. Her research interests include queer of color critique, theories of embodiment, and sexuality studies. She has published or forthcoming articles in Social Text, differences, WSQ, GLQ, and Women and Performance. Her book, Sensational Flesh: Race, Power, and Masochism, was recently published by NYU Press.
Cost : Free and open to the public. Pay-by-space & all-day ($12) parking available in Lot 3.
UCLA Center for the Study of Women (310) 825-0590
http://www.csw.ucla.edu/
csw@women.ucla.edu Sponsor(s): African Studies Center, UCLA International Institute, English, Gender Studies, Bunche Center for African American Studies, Afro-American Studies Interdepartmental Program, Labor and Workplace Studies, UCLA Center for the Study of Women