About The Book
Table of Contents
About The Author
Related Content
Customer Reviews
How does the concept of love fit with Black identity?
When Black Lives Matter activist Marissa Johnson was pressed to address why she “hates white people”, she responded with this question: do you love Black people? This book is an exploration of the issues raised by this radical question – a refusal to centre Black identity on whiteness, a question of how love, and self-love, fit with Black identity, and a queering of how Black identity is understood.
Told through autobiographical reflection, this book contains the story of one Black woman’s process of iterative identity formation, grappling with the intersections of sexuality, gender, self-image, and love. Focusing on lived experience, the book places theories in context, exploring what ideas look like when applied to real life, making it invaluable reading for Black Studies and related courses.
0: Introduction
1: Welcome to America
2: Learning to be Black and female: an American dilemma
3: Black liberation, who? Black liberation, what?
4: White supremacy is whack
5: Ex-church girl
6: Sex and the Black Christian girl
7: The road to Queerville
8: Love as a mission
Kadian Pow PhD is a Lecturer at the School of Social Sciences, Birmingham City University. A Jamaican-American ex-pat, she is now based in Birmingham, UK.
On Thursday September 7, 2023, we held a seminar in our Topics in Black Studies series:
Losing My Religion: How Organized Religion Continues to Control and Shape Black Women’s Identity
This free seminar was a conversation between author Kadian Pow and Chris McAuley, Lived Places Publishing Collection Editor. In this very personal discussion, they talked about how religious institutions have maintained their power to shape and control Black women's identities, despite a statistical decline in church attendance.
How does the concept of love fit with Black identity?
When Black Lives Matter activist Marissa Johnson was pressed to address why she “hates white people”, she responded with this question: do you love Black people? This book is an exploration of the issues raised by this radical question – a refusal to centre Black identity on whiteness, a question of how love, and self-love, fit with Black identity, and a queering of how Black identity is understood.
Told through autobiographical reflection, this book contains the story of one Black woman’s process of iterative identity formation, grappling with the intersections of sexuality, gender, self-image, and love. Focusing on lived experience, the book places theories in context, exploring what ideas look like when applied to real life, making it invaluable reading for Black Studies and related courses.
0: Introduction
1: Welcome to America
2: Learning to be Black and female: an American dilemma
3: Black liberation, who? Black liberation, what?
4: White supremacy is whack
5: Ex-church girl
6: Sex and the Black Christian girl
7: The road to Queerville
8: Love as a mission
Kadian Pow PhD is a Lecturer at the School of Social Sciences, Birmingham City University. A Jamaican-American ex-pat, she is now based in Birmingham, UK.
On Thursday September 7, 2023, we held a seminar in our Topics in Black Studies series:
Losing My Religion: How Organized Religion Continues to Control and Shape Black Women’s Identity
This free seminar was a conversation between author Kadian Pow and Chris McAuley, Lived Places Publishing Collection Editor. In this very personal discussion, they talked about how religious institutions have maintained their power to shape and control Black women's identities, despite a statistical decline in church attendance.