Professor Lee Quinby – Spring 2013

Category: April


Archive for the ‘April’ Category

Sharing is (Not) Caring

One of the worst aspects of an individual contracting AIDS is dealing with the public stigma associated with the disease.  Even today, a great deal of misconception surrounds those with HIV and AIDS.  Surprisingly, the highest risk group is women over the age of 50, as believing that they are past the age of menopause, […]

Death’s Biopower

They say death does not discriminate. And, for the most part, it’s true. Death comes for all of us one day. Most of us don’t know when that day is and most of us live with the knowledge of our imminent death on the backburner of our conscious. But there are some individuals—the sick, the […]

The AIDS Apocalypse

1980’s New York at the height of the AIDS crisis feels, within the context of the play, like the last days – the characters both fear an apocalypse and hope for humanity’s absolution. The supernatural elements of the play reflect this, with celestial beings struggling with the decision of mankind’s ultimate fate. On an individual […]

The Only Way

In a matrifocal kinship network, the relationship between mother and child is of utmost importance, and is the relation upon which all power is patterned. This integral, essential connection is blurred under the aegis of the patriarchy that defines power dynamics in the contemporary era. One could argue that the defining relationship was between father […]

Shameless Sex

Something about the way African American women write about sexuality is unparalleled. There is a kind of an easy and beautiful continuum between pain and passion, that is expressed in a raw and unashamed way, that speaks to a culture that developed from very different roots in this country. Maybe it stems from what Brenda […]

Flexing the Nexus

Rereading Toni Morrison’s foreword to Sula at the end of the novel was indispensable in cementing my comprehension of the story. While I understand that the desire to have an audience consider a text alongside a set of principles requires a strategic placement of them, Morrison’s preface doesn’t do justice to the words that follow; […]

Scientia Sexualis in African-American Communities

As The Scarlett Letter was written in the Victorian Era about the Puritan Era, Sula was written about an older period of time through the lens of an more recent one. To what extent might Sula be superficially set in an older period of time, but actually concerned with society at the time the book […]

Wright and Peace

Despite the vast differences between the upbringings of Sula Peace and Nel Wright, the two bosom buddies in Toni Morrison’s 1973 novel Sula have one aspect in common: both were reared by overbearing maternal figures.  For Nel, this controlling female comes in the form of her mother Helene, whose own parentage is so spotty, as […]

Power from the Bottom

This week’s readings paid very close attention to the power relations within African American communities. The African Americans in Sula and the essays by Stevenson and Hansen were often in a position of powerlessness. Be it slavery in the South or racism in the North, whites used numerous tactics to keep positions of power over […]

Girls in the Movies; Movies in the Girls

Media is a far more essential part of life now than it has been ever before. It is harder to separate it from the rest of our lives. Media consumption is not an activity anymore. It is not usually something you go out to do, or set aside time to do. It fills all of […]