Things that Queer: Disorienting Intimacies in Late Nineteenth Century Jooks

Author(s): Jamie Arjona

Year: 2015

Summary

This paper examines late nineteenth and early twentieth century jook joints as sites that generated queer African-American intimacies and animacies. Emerging in the 1880s throughout much of the rural United States, jook joints crafted a performatively queer medium within African-American communities. Particularly in the rural south, these jooks offered a haven for black music, dance, gambling, prostitution, and alcohol consumption that disoriented expectations of temperance and frugality. Drawing from affect theory, queer theory and ontological approaches to materiality, I attempt to understand how jook atmospheres generated intimate connections between people and things that were, in turn, condemned by a host of black leaders. The animate assemblage of performers and materials that once resided in these rural spaces contested models of reproductive futurity and craft a focal point for understanding affective disillusionment captured in material attachments.

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Cite this Record

Things that Queer: Disorienting Intimacies in Late Nineteenth Century Jooks. Jamie Arjona. Presented at The 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Francisco, California. 2015 ( tDAR id: 396837)

Spatial Coverage

min long: -91.274; min lat: 24.847 ; max long: -72.642; max lat: 36.386 ;