Jezebel Unhinged: Loosing the Black Female Body in Religion and Culture

Tamura Lomax

Jezebel Unhinged: Loosing the Black Female Body in Religion and Culture
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Duke University Press
Country
United States
Published
16 October 2018
Pages
288
ISBN
9781478001072

Jezebel Unhinged: Loosing the Black Female Body in Religion and Culture

Tamura Lomax

In Jezebel Unhinged Tamura Lomax traces the use of the jezebel trope in the black church and in black popular culture, showing how it is pivotal to reinforcing men’s cultural and institutional power to discipline and define black girlhood and womanhood. Drawing on writing by medieval thinkers and travelers, Enlightenment theories of race, the commodification of women’s bodies under slavery, and the work of Tyler Perry and Bishop T. D. Jakes, Lomax shows how black women are written into religious and cultural history as sites of sexual deviation. She identifies a contemporary black church culture where figures such as Jakes use the jezebel stereotype to suggest a divine approval of the lady while condemning girls and women seen as hos. The stereotype preserves gender hierarchy, black patriarchy, and heteronormativity in black communities, cultures, and institutions. In response, black women and girls resist, appropriate, and play with the stereotype’s meanings. Healing the black church, Lomax contends, will require ceaseless refusal of the idea that sin resides in black women’s bodies, thus disentangling black women and girls from the jezebel narrative’s oppressive yoke.

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