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LEADER 00000cam  2200613 i 4500 
001    ocn945948991 
003    OCoLC 
005    20170331033040.0 
008    161208t20172017nyu           000 0 eng   
010      2016023955 
019    968612775 
020    9781558619432|qpaperback 
020    1558619437|qpaperback 
035    (OCoLC)945948991|z(OCoLC)968612775 
037    |bConsortium Book Sales & Dist, C/O Perseus Distribution 
       210 American Dr, Jackson, TN, USA, 38301|nSAN 631-760X 
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050 00 HQ1421|b.C78 2017 
082 00 305.420973|223 
084    SOC010000|aSOC001000|aSOC028000|aSOC056000|2bisacsh 
092    305.42|bC956C 
245 04 The crunk feminist collection /|cedited by Brittney C. 
       Cooper, Susana M. Morris, and Robin M. Boylorn. 
250    First Feminist Press edition. 
264  1 New York City :|bFeminist Press at the City University of 
       New York,|c2017. 
264  4 |c©2017 
300    xxi, 336 pages ;|c23 cm 
336    text|btxt|2rdacontent 
337    unmediated|bn|2rdamedia 
338    volume|bnc|2rdacarrier 
505 00 |tThe Crunk Feminist Collective mission statement --|tHip 
       hop generation feminism: a manifesto --|tIntro: Get CRUNK!
       /|rBrittney C. Cooper, Susana M. Morris, and Robin M. 
       Boylorn --|tGender: @#$% the patriarchy.|gIntroduction ;
       |tDear patriarchy /|rCrunkista ;|tOn Black men showing up 
       for Black women at the scene of the crime /|rBrittney C. 
       Cooper ;|tThe evolution of a down-ass chick /|rRobin M. 
       Boylorn ;|tHow did I become a feminist? /|rEesha Pandit ;
       |tDo we need a body count to count? Notes on the serial 
       murders of Black women /|rAisha Durham ;|tWhat does Black 
       masculinity look like? /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;|tEight 
       reasons why formenism can ruin your love life /|rBrittney 
       C. Cooper and Susana M. Morris ;|tOn being called out my 
       name /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;|tJesus wasn't a slut shamer, or
       how conservative theology harms Black women /|rBrittney C.
       Cooper --|tRace and racism: all Black lives matter.
       |gIntroduction ;|tRefereeing Serena: racism, anger, and US
       (Women's) tennis /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tOn Kimani Gray, 
       or to be young, guilty, and Black /|rSusana M. Morris ;
       |tSlutWalks vs. Ho Strolls /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tFuck 
       Sears, or when mall cops attack /|rCrunkista ;|tRe-nigging
       on the promises: #Justice4Trayvon /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;
       |tThe western gaze: on photography in the two-thirds world
       /|rEesha Pandit ;|tTrayvon Martin and prison abolition /
       |rChanel Craft Tanner ;|tWorking while Black: ten racial 
       microagressions experienced in the workplace /|rRobin M. 
       Boylorn ;|tFor whites who consider being allies but find 
       it much too tuff /|rSusana M. Morris --|tFamily and 
       community: choosing family.|gIntroduction ;|tReflections 
       on coming out and family /|rCrunkista ;|tThe evidence of 
       things not seen: sex and power in the Black church /
       |rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tFish dreams /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;
       |tInconceivable: Black infertility /|rAisha Durham ;|tWhat
       I value most /|rRachel Raimist ;|tGod's plan ain't Black 
       mothers dying young /|rSheri Davis-Faulkner ;|tAfter the 
       love has gone: radical community after the election /
       |rSusana M. Morris ;|tMama's baby, papa's maybe /|rSusana 
       M. Morris ;|tWhat love looks like in public /|rRobin M. 
       Boylorn ;|t#CFCTaughtMe: five lessons on life and 
       relationships on the occasion of our fifth anniversary /
       |rBrittney C. Cooper --|tGirls studies: Black girls are 
       magic.|gIntroduction ;|tWon't you celebrate with me? /
       |rSusana M. Morris ;|tMeeting girls where they are /
       |rChanel Craft Tanner ;|tBaby hair: for Gabby, Blue Ivy, 
       Tiana, and me /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;|tWhen everything hurts
       : Black pain, silence, and suicide tries /|rRobin M. 
       Boylorn ;|tUnbreakable, or the problem with praising 
       Blackgirl strength /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;|tOlympics 
       oppression? Gabby Douglas and smile politics /|rBrittney 
       C. Cooper ;|tWhat if we were free? Riley Curry and 
       Blackgirl freedom /|rRobin M. Boylorn --|tPolitics and 
       policy: the personal is political.|gIntroduction ;|tOn the
       pole for freedom: Bree Newsome's politics, theory, and 
       theology of resistance /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tThe wait 
       of a nation /|rSheri Davis-Faulkner ;|tHealth-care reform,
       politics, and power: is the Supreme Court crunk? /|rEesha 
       Pandit ;|tReproductive injustice and the "War on Women," 
       or an ode to the intersections /|rEesha Pandit ;|tMy 
       brother's keeper and the co-optation of intersectionality 
       /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tReflections on respectability /
       |rSusana M. Morris ;|tCitizenship and silence: speaking 
       the stories aloud /|rEesha Pandit ;|tTeachers are not 
       magical Negroes /|rSusana M. Morris ; Making movement 
       mistakes: what to do when you f@*k up /|rEesha Pandit --
       |tHip hop generation feminism: feminism all the way turned
       up.|gIntroduction ;|tTen crunk commandments for 
       reinvigorating hip hop feminist studies /|rBrittney C. 
       Cooper, Aisha Durham, Susana M. Morris, and Rachel Raimist
       ;|tLensing the culture: (Hip hop) women behind the camera 
       /|rRachel Raimist ;|tSticks, stones, and microphones: a 
       melody of misogyny /|rAisha Durham ;|tConfessions of a 
       backslider /|rChanel Craft Tanner ;|tDisrespectability 
       politics: on Jay Z's bitch, Beyoncé's "fly" ass, and Black
       girl blue /|rBrittney C. Cooper --|tLove, sex and 
       relationships: Black feminist sex is the best sex ever.
       |gIntroduction ;|tSingle, saved, and sexin': the gospel of
       gettin' your freak on /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tShe got a 
       big ego? Thoughts on dating with a doctorate /|rBrittney 
       C. Cooper ;|tBeing single: on Mary Jane, Gabrielle Union, 
       and those of us who are imperfect /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;
       |tOn the glorification of the side chick /|rRobin M. 
       Boylorn ;|tWhat's up with dudes not being able to give 
       compliments? /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tHow Chris Brown is 
       effing up my sex life /|rBrittney C. Cooper --|tPop 
       culture: the rise of the ratchet.|gIntroduction ;|tNicki's
       world /|rAisha Durham ;|t(Un)clutching my mother's pearls,
       or ratchetness and the residue of respectability /
       |rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tGirl, bye: why this moment is 
       bigger than Paula Deen /|rSusana M. Morris ;|tThe unending
       heartbreak of great expectations: why I can't watch The 
       Mindy Project anymore /|rEesha Pandit ;|tFive reasons I'm 
       here for Beyoncé, the feminist /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tOn
       bell, Beyoncé, and bullshit /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tClair
       Huxtable is dead /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tA scandal and a 
       lawn chair: why Olivia Pope can't save us from racism /
       |rRobin M. Boylorn ;|tTyler Perry hates Black women: five 
       thoughts on The Haves and the Have Nots /|rBrittney C. 
       Cooper --|tIdentity: intersectionality for a new 
       generation.|gIntroduction ;|tYou're pretty for a dark-
       skinned girl /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;|tDoes this make me look
       fat? /|rSusana M. Morris ;|tDoes this make me look Latina?
       /|rCrunkista ;|tMemories, survival, and safety /
       |rCrunkista ;|tGetting to happy, or the myth of happily 
       ever after /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;|tWhen you're "the one" /
       |rSusana M. Morris --|tSisterhood: she's not heavy, she's 
       my sister.|gIntroduction ;|tAntoine Dodson's sister: on 
       invisibility as violence /|rChanel Craft Tanner ;|tThe 
       joy(s) of being a (Black) woman /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;|tIs 
       it ever okay to tell a sister to go kick rocks? Black 
       women and friendship /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tBeauty 
       parlor politics /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;|tRemember their 
       names: in memory of Kasandra, Cherica, and others gone too
       soon /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;|tMama's feminism /|rRobin M. 
       Boylorn ;|tSo, two feminists walk into a bar /|rSusana M. 
       Morris ;|tHow talking to your homegirls can "liberate" 
       your sex life /|rBrittney C. Cooper --|tSelf-care: thus 
       saith the Lorde.|gIntroduction ;|tLife is not a fairy tale
       : Black women and depression /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;|tThese 
       days I hate going to the gynecologist /|rSheri Davis-
       Faulkner --|tBack-to-school beatitudes: ten academic 
       survival tips /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tLove me like you 
       love your lover /|rAisha Durham ;|tLoving ourselves: the 
       case for radical empathy /|rSusana M. Morris ;|tBlack 
       autumn: on Black anger, tiredness, and the limits of self-
       care /|rBrittney C. Cooper ;|tDisappearing acts, 
       unreciprocated interest(s), and other rhythms to my blues 
       /|rRobin M. Boylorn ;|tHow to say no and when to say yes /
       |rRobin M. Boylorn --|gOutro /|rBrittney C. Cooper, Susana
       M. Morris, and Robin M. Boylorn --|tCrunk glossary. 
520    "For the Crunk Feminist Collective, their academic day 
       jobs were lacking in conversations they actually wanted-
       relevant, real conversations about how race and gender 
       politics intersect with pop culture and current events. To
       address this void, they started a blog. Now with an annual
       readership of nearly one million, their posts foster 
       dialogue about activist methods, intersectionality, and 
       sisterhood. And the writers' personal identities-as black 
       women; as sisters, daughters, and lovers; and as 
       television watchers, sports fans, and music lovers-are 
       never far from the discussion at hand. These essays 
       explore "Sex and Power in the Black Church," discuss how 
       "Clair Huxtable is Dead," list "Five Ways Talib Kweli Can 
       Become a Better Ally to Women in Hip Hop," and dwell on 
       "Dating with a Doctorate (She Got a Big Ego?)." Self-
       described as "critical homegirls," the authors tackle life
       stuck between loving hip hop and ratchet culture while 
       hating patriarchy, misogyny, and sexism. Brittney Cooper 
       is an assistant professor at Rutgers University. In 
       addition to a weekly column in Salon.com, her words have 
       appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, 
       Cosmo.com, and many others. In 2013 and 2014, she was 
       named to the Root.com's Root 100, an annual list of Top 
       Black Influencers. Susana M. Morris received her Ph.D. 
       from Emory University and is currently an associate 
       professor of English at Auburn University. Robin M. 
       Boylorn is assistant professor at the University of 
       Alabama. She is the author of the award-winning monograph 
       Sweetwater: Black Women and Narratives of Resilience 
       (Peter Lang, 2013)"--|cProvided by publisher. 
520    "For the Crunk Feminist Collective, their academic jobs 
       were lacking in conversations about how race and gender 
       politics intersected with pop culture and current events. 
       So they started a blog to create dialogue as critical 
       women stuck between loving hip hop culture while hating 
       patriarchy and sexism"--|cProvided by publisher. 
650  0 African American feminists|zUnited States. 
650  0 Feminism|zUnited States. 
650  0 African Americans|xStudy and teaching|zUnited States. 
650  0 African Americans|vBlogs|xSocial aspects. 
650  0 African Americans|vBlogs|xPolitical aspects. 
650  7 African Americans.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst00799558 
650  7 African American feminists.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01201928 
650  7 African Americans|xStudy and teaching.|2fast
       |0(OCoLC)fst00799707 
650  7 Feminism.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst00922671 
650  7 SOCIAL SCIENCE / Feminism & Feminist Theory.|2bisacsh 
650  7 SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American 
       Studies.|2bisacsh 
650  7 SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies.|2bisacsh 
650  7 SOCIAL SCIENCE / Black Studies (Global).|2bisacsh 
651  7 United States.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01204155 
700 1  Cooper, Brittney C.,|d1980-|eeditor. 
700 1  Morris, Susana M.,|d1980-|eeditor. 
700 1  Boylorn, Robin M.,|d1978-|eeditor. 
776 08 |iOnline version:|tCrunk feminist collection|dNew York : 
       The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2017|z9781558619487|w(DLC) 
       2016057108 
994    C0|bSTJ 
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