Skip to main content

Murderous Feeling Gender and Retribution in Black and Indigenous Literature

الشعور القاتل بالجنس والانتقام في الأدب الأسود والسكان الأصليين

Not Translated

Examining revenge narratives as a feminist response to slavery and settler colonialism

From Octavia Butler’s Kindred to The Round House by Louise Erdrich, themes of retribution resound throughout the work of renowned Black and Indigenous women and queer authors. Revealing how the Black Power Movement and the American Indian Movement influenced literature from the 1960s onward, Murderous Feeling explores how these writers have employed revenge narratives as a response to white supremacy and colonialism.

Chad Benito Infante shows how, rather than using retributive violence to cultivate a heroic, masculine ideal, Black and Native women and queer writers use revenge as a way to raise philosophical questions about justice and the reclamation of power in the face of white supremacy. Pairing canonical texts—including work by James Baldwin, Leslie Marmon Silko, Craig Womack, Toni Morrison, and others—he demonstrates how this uniquely queer and feminist literary tradition, the “grammar of interrogation,” allows for generative ambivalence and curiosity about the possibilities and failures of violence.

In highlighting these narratives’ potential to steer anticolonial efforts, Murderous Feeling reconceptualizes literary

Murderous Feeling Gender and Retribution in Black and Indigenous Literature

Bibliographic Data

Author
PublisherUniversity of Minnesota PressWebsite
Publisher Addresspresspr@umn.edu
CountryUSA
Also In
LanguageEnglish (EN)
Pages424 pages
Editionfirst
Dimensions6.00 x 9.00
ISBN9781517919887
Translation
Not Translated

Similar Books