Wednesday, July 29, 2020
My Intersectional Nonfiction 2018 Reading List
My Intersectional Nonfiction 2018 Reading List This is a guest post from Christina Orlando. Christina runs Muse Monthly, the subscription box for books and tea. She is a champion for diversity in the lit community, and is dedicated to supporting marginalized voices across the publishing industry. She lives in New York, sports seven literary tattoos, loves all media, and is a proud queer Latinx business owner. Follow her on Twitter @cxorlando @musemonthly. This is not your motherâs reading challenge. As we steadily inch closer to the New Year, there will be a lot of talk about reading challenges, goals, and ways to knock down that ever-growing To-Be-Read Pile. Iâm a big fan of reading challenges, especially those that encourage you to step outside your comfort zone a little bit. However, this year Iâve decided to do something a little different. Iâm assigning myself a list of non-fiction works centered around my personal identityâ"texts on gender, sexuality, and race, with a focus on intersectionality and queer and/or trans people of color. This pursuit is less about reading for pleasure and more about academic enrichment and personal growth. This past year has been a tough one on anyone who could be considered a minorityâ"the past few years, reallyâ"and though society and young people are becoming more and more aware of the growing issues facing minority groups, for me, itâs not enough to be âwoke.â A lot of the information I have now comes from the internet or from the experiences of friends, which is important information, but I still donât feel properly equipped. My list focuses less on personal essay collections a la Bad Feminist (which are still important) and more on academic sources, when possible. The intention of this reading challenge is to give myself a better education about the history of feminism and queerness, racial issues, and how modern conceptualizations of these issues have evolved. I remember taking a single Gender Sexuality class in collegeâ"the required amountâ"and the professor asking on the first day what we hoped to learn. I mentioned I wanted to learn more about how bisexuality fit into LGBTQ history. The subject wasnât even touched. Racial differences werenât even touched. Latinx lit or history classes werenât even offered. There was so much that I missed out on. Good news is, I feel like a better student as I near my thirties than I was during my college years, so Iâm ready to take this challenge on. I encourage you to do the same. Hereâs my plan: Gender Trouble by Judith Butler Feminism is for Everybody by bell hooks The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan Sexing the Body by Anne Fausto-Sterling A Queer History of the United States by Michael Bronski Transgender History by Susan Stryker Sapphistries: A Global History of Love between Women by Leila J. Rupp A History of Bisexuality by Steven Angelides Borderlands by Gloria Anzaldua Excerpts/Articles âThe Uses of the Erotic: Eroticism as Powerâ by Audre Lorde âThe Traffic in Women: Notes on the âPolitical Economyâ of Sexâ by Gayle Rubin âCompulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existenceâ by Adrienne Rich Special Thanks to Adriana Sisko, Gender Womenâs Studies PhD Candidate specializing in sexuality at the University of Kentucky and Dena Lagomarsino, City, Culture, and Community specialist at Tulane University for their guidance and recommendations. Sign up for True Story to receive nonfiction news, new releases, and must-read forthcoming titles. Thank you for signing up! Keep an eye on your inbox.
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