I've Got a Testimony: James Baldwin and the Broken Silences of Black Queer Men

James Baldwin writes within and against the testimonial tradition emerging from the Black Church, challenging the institution’s refusal to acknowledge the voices and experiences of black queer men. Baldwin’s autobiographical novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain, creates a space for Baldwin’s testimony...

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Main Author: McKinley E Melton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Manchester University Press 2016-12-01
Series:James Baldwin Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jbr.openlibrary.manchester.ac.uk/index.php/jbr/article/view/19
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author McKinley E Melton
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author_sort McKinley E Melton
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description James Baldwin writes within and against the testimonial tradition emerging from the Black Church, challenging the institution’s refusal to acknowledge the voices and experiences of black queer men. Baldwin’s autobiographical novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain, creates a space for Baldwin’s testimony to be expressed, and also lays the foundation for a tradition of black queer artists to follow. In the contemporary moment, poet Danez Smith inhabits Baldwin’s legacy, offering continuing critiques of the rigidity of conservative Christian ideologies, while publishing and performing poetry that gives voice to their own experiences, and those of the black queer community at large. These testimonies ultimately function as a means of rhetorical resistance, which not only articulates black queer lives and identities, but affirms them.
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spelling doaj.art-8f9eecbb497f4de5903eaf6250edc42f2022-12-21T18:44:22ZengManchester University PressJames Baldwin Review2056-92032056-92112016-12-012062710.7227/JBR.2.226I've Got a Testimony: James Baldwin and the Broken Silences of Black Queer MenMcKinley E Melton0Gettysburg CollegeJames Baldwin writes within and against the testimonial tradition emerging from the Black Church, challenging the institution’s refusal to acknowledge the voices and experiences of black queer men. Baldwin’s autobiographical novel, Go Tell It on the Mountain, creates a space for Baldwin’s testimony to be expressed, and also lays the foundation for a tradition of black queer artists to follow. In the contemporary moment, poet Danez Smith inhabits Baldwin’s legacy, offering continuing critiques of the rigidity of conservative Christian ideologies, while publishing and performing poetry that gives voice to their own experiences, and those of the black queer community at large. These testimonies ultimately function as a means of rhetorical resistance, which not only articulates black queer lives and identities, but affirms them.https://jbr.openlibrary.manchester.ac.uk/index.php/jbr/article/view/19black queer men, Church, testimony, silence
spellingShingle McKinley E Melton
I've Got a Testimony: James Baldwin and the Broken Silences of Black Queer Men
James Baldwin Review
black queer men, Church, testimony, silence
title I've Got a Testimony: James Baldwin and the Broken Silences of Black Queer Men
title_full I've Got a Testimony: James Baldwin and the Broken Silences of Black Queer Men
title_fullStr I've Got a Testimony: James Baldwin and the Broken Silences of Black Queer Men
title_full_unstemmed I've Got a Testimony: James Baldwin and the Broken Silences of Black Queer Men
title_short I've Got a Testimony: James Baldwin and the Broken Silences of Black Queer Men
title_sort i ve got a testimony james baldwin and the broken silences of black queer men
topic black queer men, Church, testimony, silence
url https://jbr.openlibrary.manchester.ac.uk/index.php/jbr/article/view/19
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