Vodou as Idea: On Omise’eke Natasha Tinsley’s “Ezili’s Mirrors”
Exploring the line between faith and fantasy, “voodoo” and Vodou, in Omise’eke Natasha Tinsley’s “Ezili’s Mirrors: Imagining Queer Black Genders.”
"As far as I'm concerned, being any gender is a drag." — Patti Smith
Exploring the line between faith and fantasy, “voodoo” and Vodou, in Omise’eke Natasha Tinsley’s “Ezili’s Mirrors: Imagining Queer Black Genders.”
Gina Athena UlysseSep 28, 2018
Kitty Lindsay finds a useful tool in "Graphic Reproduction: A Comics Anthology," edited by Jenell Johnson.
Kitty LindsaySep 28, 2018
A cultural biography of America’s censor and the new Puritanism.
Anthony MostromSep 18, 2018
William Giraldi speaks with Daniel Baxter, author of “One Life at a Time: An American Doctor’s Memoir of AIDS in Botswana.”
William GiraldiSep 16, 2018
How the neoliberal rhetoric of "choice" has made it harder to raise children.
Anat Shenker-OsorioSep 12, 2018
“Black Panther” is not only about projecting African diaspora people and cultures into the future; it’s also about recovering the past.
Andrea HairstonSep 8, 2018
Eric Newman speaks with John Rechy about his latest novel, “Pablo!,” and the struggles and pleasures that have attended his long career as a writer.
Eric NewmanSep 2, 2018
Lisa Fetchko reviews Gabriela Wiener's "Sexographies."
Lisa FetchkoAug 29, 2018
Will Clark on what critics like D.A. Miller and Tom Joudrey are missing in their critique of contemporary gay representation in film and television.
Will ClarkAug 28, 2018
Reflections on queer punk art and performance.
Raquel GutiérrezAug 17, 2018
A witches’ brew of magic, legend, and tortured faith.
Marilyn MacronAug 12, 2018
Allison Yarrow’s “90s Bitch” explores how pre-2000s culture both celebrated and constrained autonomous femininity.
Randle BrowningAug 9, 2018