"Queer Pollen" discusses three notable black queer twentieth
century artists--painter and writer Richard Bruce Nugent, author
James Baldwin, and filmmaker Marlon Riggs--and the unique ways they
turned to various media to work through their experiences living as
queer black men. David A. Gerstner elucidates the complexities in
expressing queer black desire through traditional art forms such as
painting, poetry, and literary prose, or in the industrial medium
of cinema. This challenge is made particularly sharp when the terms
"black" and "homosexuality" come freighted with white ideological
conceptualizations. Gerstner adroitly demonstrates how Nugent,
Baldwin, and Riggs interrogated the seductive power and saturation
of white queer cultures, grasping the deceit of an entrenched
cultural logic that defined their identity and their desire in
terms of whiteness. Their work confounds the notion of foundational
origins that prescribe the limits of homosexual and racial desire,
perversely refusing the cordoned-off classifications assigned to
the "homosexual" and the "raced" body. "Queer Pollen" articulates a
cinematic aesthetic that unfolds through painting, poetry, dance,
novels, film, and video that marks the queer black body in relation
to matters of race, gender, sexuality, nation, and death.
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