The Black Feminist Coup

Black Women’s Lived Experiences in White Supremacist Feminist Academic Spaces

Staci Perryman-Clark author Mariam Konaté author Jennifer L Richardson author Olivia Marie McLaughlin author Keiondra Grace author Beth Powers editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Peter Lang Publishing Inc

Published:29th Feb '24

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Black Feminist Coup cover

The Black Feminist Coup: Black Women’s Lived Experiences in White Supremacist Feminist Academic Spaces is a collective narrative of how three Black women faculty at a large MidwesternPWI, and two of their former students and allies build alliances to collaboratively disrupt whitesupremacist feminist spaces. Themes of what it means to be a fugitive, to be free, and to be afeminist inform how we envision the future of Black women’s labor in the academy. More specifically,this project explores intersecting narratives of how three Black women faculty fled aracist and microaggressive Gender and Women’s Studies (GWS) department, following the startof the COVID 19 pandemic and the 2020 summer of racial unrest, and moved to an institute thathouses African American and African studies. Their stories of misogynoir reflect a brutal ironythat GWS departments expect Black women to further all women’s interests while impeding Blackwomen’s ability to thrive. This work demands that institutions bear responsibility in providingBlack women with an environment to thrive, and dream of new possibilities and opportunitiesto develop curricula and initiatives that center Black lives with priority. Bridging at the intersectionsof feminism, Black Studies, and higher education, this project surveys concepts of survival,trauma, pain, and healing to offer future possibilities for dismantling and challenging systems ofwhite supremacy in the academy.

The Black Feminist Coup is a groundbreaking text. Through courageous counter-stories and brilliant theoretical engagements, the authors spotlight the various intellectual traditions, institutional arrangements, power dynamics, and sociocultural practices that have made academia a persistent site of oppression and violence for Black women. Although such an offering would be more than enough for a single text, the book also provides a clear and accessible pathway toward dismantling White supremacy, nurturing radical resistance, and building safe and productive intellectual spaces for Black women within academia.

—Marc Lamont Hill, Presidential Professor of Urban Education and

Anthropology at CUNY Graduate Center

THE BLACK FEMINIST COUP is a compelling, courageous co-authored monograph that explores the lived experiences of a group of mostly Black women in white supremacist feminist spaces at one university. Grounded in Black feminist history and theory, this pioneering text makes visible – in moving and painful ways-- the impact of racism,...

THE BLACK FEMINIST COUP is a compelling, courageous co-authored monograph that explores the lived experiences of a group of mostly Black women in white supremacist feminist spaces at one university. Grounded in Black feminist history and theory, this pioneering text makes visible -- in moving and painful ways-- the impact of racism, sexism, and misogynoir on a particular group of Black feminists in the academy during various junctures of their journeys, including, perhaps surprisingly, women's and gender studies spaces. Especially instructive is the book's exploration of what cross-racial solidarities might mean in feminist academic spaces and what white women in particular might learn from these analyses and blueprints for transformation. Beverly Guy-Sheftall The Anna Julia Cooper Professor of Comparative Women's Studies at Spelman College and co-edited WORDS OF FIRE (New Press, 1995).
The Black Feminist Coup is a groundbreaking text. Through courageous counter-stories and brilliant theoretical engagements, the authors spotlight the various intellectual traditions, institutional arrangements, power dynamics, and sociocultural practices that have made academia a persistent site of oppression and violence for Black women. Although such an offering would be more than enough for a single text, the book also provides a clear and accessible pathway toward dismantling White supremacy, nurturing radical resistance, and building safe and productive intellectual spaces for Black women within academia. Marc Lamont Hill Presidential Professor of Urban Education and Anthropology, CUNY Graduate Center

ISBN: 9781636677064

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 260g

168 pages

New edition