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Oshun, Lemonade, and Intertextuality
Hardback

Oshun, Lemonade, and Intertextuality

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Exploring how Afro-Atlantic religion has been used to portray Black womanhood by writers and artists from Beyonce to Ntozake Shange

In this book, Sheneese Thompson analyzes works of film and literature to explore how Afro-Atlantic religion intersects with themes of resilience in Black femininity and womanhood. Focusing on Beyonce's visual album Lemonade, Thompson examines iconography of the Yoruba goddess Oshun, represented by rivers, the color yellow, and other symbols. Thompson argues that Beyonce's tribute to Oshun creates a narrative of self-repossession amid external definitions, generational trauma, and emotional violence and draws connections to other works that feature similar religious references.

Oshun, "Lemonade," and Intertextuality also explores Beyonce's album Black Is King, the television series She's Gotta Have It, Julie Dash's movie Daughters of the Dust, Ntozake Shange's novel Sassafrass, Cypress & Indigo, and Jamaica Kincaid's stories in At the Bottom of the River. These works highlight the significance of African traditional religions for the healing and transformation of their characters. Thompson discusses the ways in which Yoruba and Lucumi imagery and practices such as oriki, or praise poetry, have long been incorporated into Black cultural texts such as these to tell stories of racial and gender-based injustices. In looking at Lemonade together with influential older texts created by Black women, Thompson establishes the use of Afro-Atlantic religion--to think through Black womanhood, to explore self-defined sexuality--as a central tenet of Black women's literature, one that these artists and writers have brought to the global stage.

Publication of this work made possible by a Sustaining the Humanities through the American Rescue Plan grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University Press of Florida
Country
United States
Date
29 July 2025
Pages
170
ISBN
9780813079387

Exploring how Afro-Atlantic religion has been used to portray Black womanhood by writers and artists from Beyonce to Ntozake Shange

In this book, Sheneese Thompson analyzes works of film and literature to explore how Afro-Atlantic religion intersects with themes of resilience in Black femininity and womanhood. Focusing on Beyonce's visual album Lemonade, Thompson examines iconography of the Yoruba goddess Oshun, represented by rivers, the color yellow, and other symbols. Thompson argues that Beyonce's tribute to Oshun creates a narrative of self-repossession amid external definitions, generational trauma, and emotional violence and draws connections to other works that feature similar religious references.

Oshun, "Lemonade," and Intertextuality also explores Beyonce's album Black Is King, the television series She's Gotta Have It, Julie Dash's movie Daughters of the Dust, Ntozake Shange's novel Sassafrass, Cypress & Indigo, and Jamaica Kincaid's stories in At the Bottom of the River. These works highlight the significance of African traditional religions for the healing and transformation of their characters. Thompson discusses the ways in which Yoruba and Lucumi imagery and practices such as oriki, or praise poetry, have long been incorporated into Black cultural texts such as these to tell stories of racial and gender-based injustices. In looking at Lemonade together with influential older texts created by Black women, Thompson establishes the use of Afro-Atlantic religion--to think through Black womanhood, to explore self-defined sexuality--as a central tenet of Black women's literature, one that these artists and writers have brought to the global stage.

Publication of this work made possible by a Sustaining the Humanities through the American Rescue Plan grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University Press of Florida
Country
United States
Date
29 July 2025
Pages
170
ISBN
9780813079387