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Publications of Jennifer C. Nash    :chronological  alphabetical  combined  bibtex listing:

Books

  1. Nash, JC. How We Write Now Living with Black Feminist Theory.  Duke University Press, 2024.  [abs]
  2. Nash, JC. Birthing Black Mothers. August, 2021: 264 pages.  [abs]
  3. Nash, JC. Black Feminism Reimagined After Intersectionality.  Duke University Press, December, 2018: 184 pages.  [abs]
  4. Nash, JC. Gender Love. 2017: 383 pages.  [abs]
  5. Nash, JC. The Black Body in Ecstasy Reading Race, Reading Pornography.  Duke University Press, March, 2014: 232 pages.  [abs]

Book Chapters

  1. Nash, JC. "INTERSECTIONAL ICONOGRAPHY: Promise, Peril, Possibility." Routledge International Handbook of Intersectionality Studies January, 2024: 199-208. [doi]
  2. Nash, JC. "Thinking with Care A Critique of Love across Interdisciplines." ENTICEMENTS 2024: 305-319.
  3. Nash, JC. "Beyond Antagonism Rethinking Intersectionality, Transnationalism, and the Women's Studies Academic Job Market." TRANSNATIONAL FEMINIST ITINERARIES 2021: 37-51.
  4. Nash, JC. "Intersectionality." KEYWORDS FOR GENDER AND SEXUALITY STUDIES 2021: 128-133.
  5. Nash, J. "Pleasurable Blackness." The Palgrave Handbook of Sexuality Education November, 2016.  [abs]
  6. Nash, J. "Theorizing Race, Theorizing Racism: New Directions in Interdisciplinary Scholarship." The Ashgate Research Companion to Feminist Legal Theory April, 2016.  [abs]
  7. Nash, J. "Desiring Desiree." Porno Chic and the Sex Wars American Sexual Representation in the 1970s 2016.  [abs]

Journal Articles

  1. Nash, JC. ":Lethal Intersections: Race, Gender, and Violence." Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 50:3 (March, 2025): 797-799. [doi]
  2. Nash, JC; Pinto, S. "On Exhaustion: Toward a Post-Care Feminism." Differences 36:1 (January, 2025): 87-114. [doi]
  3. Nash, JC. "Black Feminist Self-Help: Or, Notes on the Genres of Contemporary Black Feminist Political Life." Signs 49:3 (March, 2024): 557-578. [doi]  [abs]
  4. Wiegman, R; Nash, JC. "Object Lessons at 10: a conversation." Feminist Theory 24:2 (April, 2023): 262-276. [doi]  [abs]
  5. Nash, JC. "On the beginning of the world: dominance feminism, afropessimism and the meanings of gender." Feminist Theory 23:4 (December, 2022): 556-574. [doi]  [abs]
  6. Nash, JC. "A Response to SaraEllen Strongman’s “Feeling Black Feminism, Otherwise: a Review of Jennifer Nash’s Black Feminism Reimagined: After Intersectionality (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2019)”." International Journal of Politics Culture and Society 35:3 (September, 2022): 473-475. [doi]
  7. Nash, JC. "The Promise of Repair: VBACs and Contemporary Feminist Political Desire." Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies 43:2 (2022): 169-190. [doi]
  8. Nash, JC. "Sarah Knott. Mother Is a Verb: An Unconventional History.." The American Historical Review 126:3 (November, 2021): 1240-1241. [doi]
  9. Nash, JC; Pinto, S. "A new genealogy of"intelligent rage," or other ways to think about white women in feminism." Signs 46:4 (June, 2021): 883-910. [doi]
  10. Nash, JC. "The Afterlife of Reproductive Slavery: Biocapitalism and Black Feminism’s Philosophy of History." Modern Language Quarterly 82:2 (June, 2021): 268-270. [doi]
  11. Nash, J. "Home is Where the Birth Is: Race, Risk, and Labor During COVID-19." Yale Journal of Law and Feminism 32:2 (2021): 103-132.
  12. Nash, J. "Citational Desires: On Black Feminism's Institutional Longings." Diacritics: a review of contemporary criticism 48:3 (2021): 76-91.
  13. Nash, JC. "Black Lactation Aesthetics: Remaking the Natural in Lakisha Cohill's Photographs." Feminist Studies 47:1 (2021): 94-111. [doi]
  14. Nash, JC; Pinto, S. "Strange Intimacies." Public Culture 32:3 (September, 2020): 491-512. [doi]  [abs]
  15. Nash, JC. "Slow Loss: Black Feminism and Endurance." Social Text 40:2 (June, 2020): 1-20. [doi]
  16. Nash, JC. "Writing Black Beauty." Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 45:1 (September, 2019): 101-122. [doi]
  17. Nash, JC. "Pedagogies of Desire." differences 30:1 (May, 2019): 197-227. [doi]
  18. Nash, JC. "Birthing Black Mothers: Birth Work and the Making of Black Maternal Political Subjects." WSQ: Women's Studies Quarterly 47:3-4 (2019): 29-50. [doi]
  19. Jennifer C. Nash. "Feminist Credentials: Notes on the Politics of Women's Studies Graduate Certificates." Feminist Studies 44:2 (2018): 284-284. [doi]
  20. Nash, JC. "Intersectionality and Its Discontents." American Quarterly 69:1 (2017): 117-129. [doi]
  21. Nash, JC. "Unwidowing: Rachel Jeantel, Black Death, and the “Problem” of Black Intimacy." Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 41:4 (June, 2016): 751-774. [doi]
  22. Nash, JC. "Feminist originalism: Intersectionality and the politics of reading." Feminist Theory 17:1 (April, 2016): 3-20. [doi]  [abs]
  23. Falcón, SM; Nash, JC. "Shifting analytics and linking theories: A conversation about the “meaning-making” of intersectionality and transnational feminism." Women's Studies International Forum 50 (May, 2015): 1-10. [doi]
  24. Nash, JC. "Black Anality." GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 20:4 (October, 2014): 439-460. [doi]  [abs]
  25. Nash, JC. "Institutionalizing the Margins." Social Text 32:1 (2014): 45-65. [doi]
  26. Nash, JC. "Practicing Love: Black Feminism, Love-Politics, and Post-Intersectionality." Meridians 11:2 (March, 2013): 1-24. [doi]  [abs]
  27. Nash, JC. "Strange Bedfellows." Social Text 26:4 (2008): 51-76. [doi]

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