Reading Lists

    1. Single Black Mother: Queer Reflections on Marriage and Racial Justice, forthcoming, Oxford University Press.

    2. “Marital Shade: Studies in Intersectional Invisibility,” co-authored with Paul Taylor. Philosophical Topics 49, no.1 (2021): 45-59.

    3. “Black Philosophy and the Erotic.” Black Scholar 43, no. 4 (2013): 9–25.

    4. “Race and Feminist Standpoint Theory.” In Convergences: Black Feminism and Continental Philosophy, edited by Maria Davidson, Kathryn Gines, and Donna-Dale Marcano. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 2010. 105-120.

    5. “Situated Black Women’s Voices in/on the Profession of Philosophy.” Hypatia 23, no. 2 (2008): 155-189.

    6. “Contradictions of Racism: Locke, Slavery, and the Two Treatises,” co-authored with Robert Bernasconi. In Race and Racism in Modern Philosophy, edited by Andrew Valls. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2005. 89-107.

    7. “Sartre’s Ethics of the Oppressed,” Philosophy Today 49 (Supplement) (2005): 105–109.

    8. Review of Black Heretics, Black Prophets, by Anthony Bogues, CLR James Journal 33, no. 1 (2007): 163–171.

    1. Jackson, Sarah J., Moya Bailey, and Brooke Foucault Welles. # HashtagActivism: Networks of race and gender justice. Mit Press, 2020.

    2. Bailey, Moya, and Trudy. "On misogynoir: Citation, erasure, and plagiarism." Feminist Media Studies 18.4 (2018): 762-768.

    3. Bailey, Moya, and Izetta Autumn Mobley. "Work in the intersections: A black feminist disability framework." Gender & Society 33.1 (2019): 19-40.

    4. Jackson, Sarah J., Moya Bailey, and Brooke Foucault Welles. "# GirlsLikeUs: Trans advocacy and community building online." New Media & Society 20.5 (2018): 1868-1888.

    5. Bailey, Moya Z. "All the digital humanists are white, all the nerds are men, but some of us are brave." Journal of Digital Humanities 1.1 (2011): 1-1.

    6. Bailey, Moya. "New terms of resistance: A response to Zenzele Isoke." Souls 15.4 (2013): 341-343.

    7. Bailey, Moya. "Misogynoir in medical media: on Caster Semenya and R. Kelly." Catalyst: Feminism, theory, technoscience 2.2 (2016): 1-31.

    8. Bailey, Moya. "# transform (ing) DH Writing and Research: An Autoethnography of Digital Humanities and Feminist Ethics." DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly 9.2 (2015).

    9. Jackson, Sarah J., Bailey Moya, and Brooke Foucault Welles. "Women tweet on violence: From# YesAllWomen to# MeToo." (2019).

    10. Bailey, Moya, and Whitney Peoples. "Articulating black feminist health science studies." Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience 3.2 (2017): 1-27.

    11. Bailey, Moya, and Shannon J. Miller. "When margins become centered: Black queer women in front and outside of the classroom." Feminist Formations (2015): 168-188.

    12. Bailey, Moya. "“The Illest”: Disability as metaphor in hip hop music." Everyday Women's and Gender Studies. Routledge, 2016. 36-40.

    13. Bailey, Moya, et al. "Reflections on a movement:# transformDH, growing up." Debates in the Digital Humanities 2016 (2016): 71-79.

    14. Bailey, Moya. "The ethics of pace." South Atlantic Quarterly 120.2 (2021): 285-299.

    15. Bailey, Moya. "Redefining representation: Black trans and queer women’s digital media production." Screen Bodies 1.1 (2016): 71-86.

    1. Bailey, Marlon M. Butch queens up in pumps: Gender, performance, and ballroom culture in Detroit. University of Michigan Press, 2013.

    2. Bailey, Marlon M., et al. Black Sexual Economies: Race and Sex in a Culture of Capital. University of Illinois Press, 2019.

    3. Hirshfield, Sabina, et al. "An innovative adaptation of an HIV status-neutral, community-informed, socioemotional asset-building intervention with the House Ball Community." Health Promotion Practice 24.3 (2023): 398-400.

    4. Bailey, Marlon M. "The Queerness of Touch: Mutual Recognition and Deep Intimacy in Moonlight." QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking 9.1 (2022): 59-65.

    5. Bailey, Marlon M. "Gender/racial realness: Theorizing the gender system in ballroom culture." Feminist studies 37.2 (2011): 365-386.

    6. Arnold, Emily A., and Marlon M. Bailey. "Constructing home and family: How the ballroom community supports African American GLBTQ youth in the face of HIV/AIDS." Journal of gay & lesbian social services 21.2-3 (2009): 171-188.

    7. Bailey, Marlon M. "Performance as intravention: Ballroom culture and the politics of HIV/AIDS in Detroit." Souls 11.3 (2009): 253-274.

    8. Bailey, Marlon M. "Engendering space: Ballroom culture and the spatial practice of possibility in Detroit." Gender, Place & Culture 21.4 (2014): 489-507.

    9. Bailey, Marlon M., et al. Global circuits of blackness: Interrogating the African diaspora. University of Illinois Press, 2010.

    10. Bailey, Marlon M., and L. H. Stallings. "Antiblack racism and the metalanguage of sexuality." Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 42.3 (2017): 614-621.

    11. Marlon M. Bailey & Rashad Shabazz (2014) Gender and sexual geographies of Blackness: new Black cartographies of resistance and survival (part 2), Gender, Place & Culture, 21:4, 449-452, DOI: 10.1080/0966369X.2013.786303

    12. Bailey, Marlon M. "Black gay (raw) sex." No tea, no shade. Duke University Press, 2016. 239-261.

    13. Marlon M. Bailey & Rashad Shabazz (2014) Editorial: Gender and sexual geographies of blackness: anti-black heterotopias (part 1), Gender, Place & Culture, 21:3, 316-321, DOI: 10.1080/0966369X.2013.781305

    1. Crawley, Ashon T. The lonely letters. Duke University Press, 2020.

    2. Persaud, Christopher J., and Ashon Crawley. "On black queer joy and the digital." Social Media+ Society 8.2 (2022): 20563051221107629.

    3. Crawley, Ashon. "CHAPTER ONE. Stayed/Freedom/Hallelujah." Otherwise Worlds. Duke University Press, 2020. 27-37.

    4. Crawley, Ashon. "Introduction to the Academy and What Can Be Done?." Critical Ethnic Studies 4.1 (2018): 4-19.

    5. Crawley, Ashon. "Susceptibility." GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 27.1 (2021): 11-38.

    6. Crawley, Ashon T. "Protest, Prayer." American Studies 59.2 (2020): 51-54.

    7. Crawley, Ashon. "The Labor of Faith: Gender and Power in Black Apostolic Pentecostalism Judith Casselberry. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2017 (ISBN 918-0-822-36383-5)." Hypatia 36.3 (2021): E2.

    8. Crawley, Ashon. "Otherwise Possibility." Southern Cultures 28.2 (2022): 18-29.

    9. Crawley, Ashon. "And if leaning-towards, it grounds the fact of plurality, of other-wise possibility, as the vibration from which life emerges. And if ask-ing how, then and also posits what. Because to ask the question that and posits, to go on the search and compels—how are these things in relation—is to also ask, what are these things in their separability? It is." (2019).

    10. Crawley, Ashon. "After Over-Representation, Care." ASAP/Journal 3.2 (2018): 303-306.

    11. Crawley, Ashon. "The Labor of Faith: Gender and Power in Black Apostolic Pentecostalism Judith Casselberry. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2017." (2021).

    1. Shange, Savannah. "Black girl ordinary: Flesh, carcerality, and the refusal of ethnography." Transforming Anthropology 27.1 (2019): 3-21.

    2. Shange, Savannah. Progressive dystopia: Abolition, antiblackness, and schooling in San Francisco. Duke University Press, 2020.

    3. Liu, Roseann, and Savannah Shange. "Toward thick solidarity: Theorizing empathy in social justice movements." Radical History Review 2018.131 (2018): 189-198.

    4. Shange, Savannah. "Play aunties and dyke bitches: Gender, generation, and the ethics of black queer kinship." The Black Scholar 49.1 (2019): 40-54.

    5. Shange, Savannah. "A King Named Nicki: Strategic Queerness and the Black Femmecee. Women & Performance: A Journal of Feminist Theory 24.1 (2014): 29-45.

    6. Shange, Savannah. "Black on purpose: Race, inheritance and queer reproduction." The Feminist Wire 10 (2014): 2014.

    7. Shange, Savannah. "‘This Is Not a Protest’: Managing Dissent in Racialized San Francisco." Black California Dreamin’: The Crises of California’s African-American Communities (2012): 91-104.

    8. Shange, Savannah. "CITATION AS CEREMONY.#SayHerName, #CiteBlackWomen, and the Practice of Reparative Enunciation." Cultural Anthropology 37.2 (2022): 191-198.

    9. Shange, Savannah. "Abolition in the Clutch: Shifting through the Gears with Anthropology." Feminist Anthropology 3.2 (2022): 187-197.

    10. Shange, Savannah. "Hale County This Morning, This Evening RaMell Ross, dir. 76 min. English. New York: The Cinema Guild, 2018." American Anthropologist 122.1 (2020): 178-179.

    11. Shange, Savannah. "Damien M. Sojoyner, First Strike: Educational Enclosures in Black Los Angeles." Anthropological Quarterly 91.1 (2018): 443-447.

    12. Shange, Savannah. "Unapologetically Black?." Anthropology News 57.7 (2016): e64-e66.

    13. Shange, Savannah, and Diana T. Slaughter-Defoe. "Whither go the status quo? Independent education at the turn of the twenty-first century." Black educational choice: Assessing the private and public alternatives to traditional K–12 public schools (2011): 49-63.

    1. Bacchetta, Paola, et al. "Queer of color space-making in and beyond the academic industrial complex." Critical Ethnic Studies 4.1 (2018): 44-63.

    2. Smythe, S. A. "Black Life, Trans Study: On Black Nonbinary Method, European Trans Studies, and the Will to Institutionalization." Transgender Studies Quarterly 8.2 (2021): 158-171.

    3. Smythe, Sarah A., Ben M. Thomas, and Martin Jackson. "Recycling of titanium alloy powders and swarf through continuous extrusion (Conformtm) into affordable wire for additive manufacturing." Metals 10.6 (2020): 843.

    4. Smythe, S. A. "Black Italianità: Citizenship and Belonging in the Black Mediterranean." California Italian Studies 9.1 (2019).

    5. Smythe, S. A. "What Is To Be Done? A Foreword, After." Forum for Modern Language Studies. Vol. 57. No. 2. Oxford University Press, 2021.

    6. Smythe, Samantha Ayana. L'Italia Meticcia: Being and Belonging in the Black Mediterranean. Diss. UC Santa Cruz, 2017.

    7. Smythe, S. A. "Introduction: Unsettle the Struggle, Trouble the Grounds." Postmodern Culture 31.1 (2020).

    8. Smythe, S. A. "The black Mediterranean and the politics of imagination." Middle East Report 286 (2018): 3-9.

    1. Williams, Jennifer D. "Jean Toomer's" Cane" and the Erotics of Mourning." The Southern Literary Journal 40.2 (2008): 87-101.

    2. Williams, Jennifer D. "“A Woman was Lynched the Other Day”: Memory, Gender, and the Limits of Traumatic Representation." Gender and Lynching: The Politics of Memory. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. 81-102.

    3. “‘An Elegy of Place’: Affective Mapping in June Jordan’s Civil Wars.” a/b: Auto/Biography Studies (forthcoming, 2023).

    4. “Black Women’s 1930s Protest Fiction.” African American Literature in Transition, 1930-1940:Volume 10. Eds. Eve Dunbar and Ayesha Hardison. Cambridge UP, 2022.

    5. “Travelin’ Women: Black Feminist Migrations, Diasporas, and Cosmopolitanisms,” Special Section Co-edited with Ifeoma Nwankwo. Meridians, vol. 15, no. 2, Fall 2017, pp. 382-388.

    6. “Black American Girls in Paris: Sex, Race, and Cosmopolitan Desire in Andrea Lee’s Sarah Phillips and Shay Youngblood’s Black Girl in Paris.” Contemporary Women’s Writing, vol. 9, no.2, July 2015, pp. 238-256.

    7. “‘A Woman was Lynched the Other Day’: Memory, Gender, and the Limits of Traumatic Representation.” Gender and Lynching: The Politics of Memory, edited by Evelyn M. Simien, Palgrave Macmillan, 2011, pp. 81-102.

    8. “Jean Toomer’s Cane and the Erotics of Mourning.” Southern Literary Journal vol. 40, no.2, Spring 2008, pp. 87-101. --reprinted in Cane: Norton Critical Edition, 2nd ed., edited by Rudolph Byrd and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., W.W. Norton and Co., 2011, pp. 404-417.

    9. “The Performance of Trauma in Tsitsi Dangarembga's Nervous Conditions.” Africanizing Knowledge, edited by Toyin Falola and Christian Jennings, Transaction Publishers, 2002, pp. 273-288.

    10. “‘They Call it Bronzeville!’: Revisiting Chicago’s South Side,” Review Essay of The South Side: A Portrait of Chicago and American Segregation by Natalie Y. Moore, Spatializing Blackness: Architectures of Confinement and Black Masculinity in Chicago by Rashad Shabazz, and South Side Girls: Growing Up in the Great Migration by Marcia Chatelain, The Black Scholar vol. 47, no. 4, October 2017, pp. 69-75.

    11. “An Interesting Woman: A Conversation with Andrea Lee,” Meridians vol. 15, no.2, 2017, p. 507-517.

    1. “Commentary on ‘Responsibilities to Justice-Involved Students in Higher Education’” in Equity, Freedom, and Inclusion in Higher Education: Cases and Commentaries in Educational Ethics. Edited by Rebecca Taylor and Ashley Floyd Kuntz (2022).

    2. The Intersections of Race, Gender, and Criminality: A Black Women's Phenomenological Account” in Race as Phenomena: Between Phenomenology and Philosophy of Race. Edited by Dr. Emily Lee (July 2019), Rowman and Littlefield.

    3. “On Black Women and State Violence” Review of Our Black Sons Matter: Mothers Talk about Fears, Sorrows, and Hopes, ed. George Yancy, Maria Davidson, and Susan Hadley. Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy Reviews Online (November 2018).