“<i>Between Shadows and Noise</i> is a brilliant meditation on anti-imperial forms of enmeshment and relation that exist beyond monolithic representation. Through a carefully crafted and resoundingly intimate practice of critical situatedness, Amber Jamilla Musser brings the critic into embodied relation with every scene of encounter. Animal bodies, maternal bodies, the bodies of strangers, and our own vulnerable bodies coalesce in this beautiful book to orient us toward the plurivocal and multisensory worlds always proliferating against colonial capture.” - Julietta Singh, author of (The Breaks) “Bringing together unexpected constellations of contemporary texts while experimenting with form and point of view, Amber Jamilla Musser holistically reenvisions how a <i>body of work</i> can be stretched, massaged, and released in order to attune to the creative ways racialized, colonized, and queer bodies map and remap the embodied experiences of trauma and resilience. This thought-provoking, beautifully written, and creative work will reshape current conversations in Black studies, feminist studies, art criticism, performance studies, film studies, and beyond.” - Omise'eke Natasha Tinsley, author of (The Color Pynk: Black Femme Art for Survival)
Introduction. Body Work 1
1. Us, the Uncanny, and the Threat of Black Femininity 21
2. Inside Out: Shango and Spectacles of the Spirit 42
3. Noise and the Body-Place: This ember state and the Critical Encounter 59
4. On the Brink: Approximation, Difference, and Ongoing Storms 76
5. Tamarind, Metabolism, and Rest: Making Racialized Labor Visible 94
Conclusion. Inflammation: Notes from the Front 112
Notes 131
Bibliography 157
Index 175