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Black Edens,country Eves: Listening,performance, and black queer longing in country music
Authors:Francesca T Royster
Institution:1. Department of English, DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois, USAfroyster@depaul.edu
Abstract:ABSTRACT

This article explores Black queer country music listening, performance, and fandom as a source of pleasure, nostalgia, and longing for Black listeners. Country music can be a space for alliance and community, as well as a way of accessing sometimes repressed cultural and personal histories of violence: lynching and other forms of racial terror, gender surveillance and disciplining, and continued racial and economic segregation. For many Black country music listeners and performers, the experience of being a closeted fan also fosters an experience of ideological hailing, as well as queer world-making. Royster suggests that through Black queer country music fandom and performance, fans construct risky and soulful identities. The article uses Tina Turner's solo album, Tina Turns the Country On! (1974) as an example of country music's power as a tool for resistance to racial, sexual, and class disciplining.
Keywords:African American identity  country music  fandom  pleasure  identity  queer world-making
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