Women in Love: Zami and the Politics of the Black Lesbian Body in the Diaspora

This essay focuses on the politics of the Black lesbian body in the Diaspora. Audre Lorde’s autobiographical/biomythographical novel Zami: A New Spelling of My Name (1982), as a female künstlerromane, narrativizes her polyamorous relationships with several women and presents the body as a contact zo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sreya Mallika DATTA, Anil PRADHAN
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hyperion University 2022-04-01
Series:HyperCultura
Subjects:
Online Access:http://litere.hyperion.ro/hypercultura/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/Datta_Pradhan.pdf
_version_ 1818013779309363200
author Sreya Mallika DATTA
Anil PRADHAN
author_facet Sreya Mallika DATTA
Anil PRADHAN
author_sort Sreya Mallika DATTA
collection DOAJ
description This essay focuses on the politics of the Black lesbian body in the Diaspora. Audre Lorde’s autobiographical/biomythographical novel Zami: A New Spelling of My Name (1982), as a female künstlerromane, narrativizes her polyamorous relationships with several women and presents the body as a contact zone of conflicting forces from which negotiations of the Black lesbian body in the Diaspora emerge, discursively mapping out an emotional cartography of identity, home, and belonging. The palimpsestic female body in Zami resists monolithic interpretations—it is Black, physically challenged, it is queer. The intersectional nexus of race, class, gender, sexuality, and Diaspora informs notions of the queer body. Furthermore, by embodying otherness, the body works to negotiate alternative spaces. Lorde writes the body into Zami the text, and the act of writing becomes empowering, informing the concept of the queer diasporic body with an alternative agential potential, portraying the woman as a “house of difference.” This essay interrogates this complex intersectional milieu of the diasporic, Black, lesbian, disabled body vis-à-vis the cumulative forces of racial, sexual, and socio-political repressions in mid-twentieth-century North American society as represented in/through Zami, specifically concerning refashioning constructs of queer intimacy, belonging, and home.
first_indexed 2024-04-14T06:38:34Z
format Article
id doaj.art-8dfb8383de6c47db9c066a8a1f01c3c7
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2559-2025
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-14T06:38:34Z
publishDate 2022-04-01
publisher Hyperion University
record_format Article
series HyperCultura
spelling doaj.art-8dfb8383de6c47db9c066a8a1f01c3c72022-12-22T02:07:25ZengHyperion UniversityHyperCultura2559-20252022-04-0110113Women in Love: Zami and the Politics of the Black Lesbian Body in the DiasporaSreya Mallika DATTA0Anil PRADHAN 1University of LeedsJadavpur UniversityThis essay focuses on the politics of the Black lesbian body in the Diaspora. Audre Lorde’s autobiographical/biomythographical novel Zami: A New Spelling of My Name (1982), as a female künstlerromane, narrativizes her polyamorous relationships with several women and presents the body as a contact zone of conflicting forces from which negotiations of the Black lesbian body in the Diaspora emerge, discursively mapping out an emotional cartography of identity, home, and belonging. The palimpsestic female body in Zami resists monolithic interpretations—it is Black, physically challenged, it is queer. The intersectional nexus of race, class, gender, sexuality, and Diaspora informs notions of the queer body. Furthermore, by embodying otherness, the body works to negotiate alternative spaces. Lorde writes the body into Zami the text, and the act of writing becomes empowering, informing the concept of the queer diasporic body with an alternative agential potential, portraying the woman as a “house of difference.” This essay interrogates this complex intersectional milieu of the diasporic, Black, lesbian, disabled body vis-à-vis the cumulative forces of racial, sexual, and socio-political repressions in mid-twentieth-century North American society as represented in/through Zami, specifically concerning refashioning constructs of queer intimacy, belonging, and home.http://litere.hyperion.ro/hypercultura/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/Datta_Pradhan.pdfbiomythographyblackbodydiasporadisabilitylesbianzami
spellingShingle Sreya Mallika DATTA
Anil PRADHAN
Women in Love: Zami and the Politics of the Black Lesbian Body in the Diaspora
HyperCultura
biomythography
black
body
diaspora
disability
lesbian
zami
title Women in Love: Zami and the Politics of the Black Lesbian Body in the Diaspora
title_full Women in Love: Zami and the Politics of the Black Lesbian Body in the Diaspora
title_fullStr Women in Love: Zami and the Politics of the Black Lesbian Body in the Diaspora
title_full_unstemmed Women in Love: Zami and the Politics of the Black Lesbian Body in the Diaspora
title_short Women in Love: Zami and the Politics of the Black Lesbian Body in the Diaspora
title_sort women in love zami and the politics of the black lesbian body in the diaspora
topic biomythography
black
body
diaspora
disability
lesbian
zami
url http://litere.hyperion.ro/hypercultura/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/Datta_Pradhan.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT sreyamallikadatta womeninlovezamiandthepoliticsoftheblacklesbianbodyinthediaspora
AT anilpradhan womeninlovezamiandthepoliticsoftheblacklesbianbodyinthediaspora