Jennifer Christine Nash
#122,537
Most Influential Person Now
Professor of Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies
Jennifer Christine Nash's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Jennifer Christine Nashsociology Degrees
Sociology
#2152
World Rank
#2402
Historical Rank
Gender Studies
#92
World Rank
#92
Historical Rank
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Sociology Anthropology
Jennifer Christine Nash's Degrees
- Bachelors English Spelman College
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Why Is Jennifer Christine Nash Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Jennifer Christine Nash is the Jean Fox O'Barr Professor of Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies at Duke University within its Trinity College of Arts and Sciences. Her research interests include Black feminist theory, feminist legal theory, Black sexual politics, black motherhood, black maternal health, race and law, and intersectionality.
Jennifer Christine Nash's Published Works
Published Works
- re-thinking intersectionality (2008) (1002)
- Black Feminism Reimagined (2018) (245)
- Practicing Love: Black Feminism, Love-Politics, and Post-Intersectionality (2013) (174)
- Shifting analytics and linking theories: A conversation about the “meaning-making” of intersectionality and transnational feminism (2015) (108)
- Intersectionality and Its Discontents (2017) (100)
- Feminist originalism: Intersectionality and the politics of reading (2016) (66)
- Strange Bedfellows Black Feminism and Antipornography Feminism (2008) (43)
- 'Home Truths' on Intersectionality (2011) (43)
- The Black Body in Ecstasy (2020) (33)
- Black Anality (2014) (33)
- Institutionalizing the Margins (2014) (30)
- Introduction: Institutional Feelings: Practicing Women’s Studies in the Corporate University (2016) (24)
- Unwidowing: Rachel Jeantel, Black Death, and the “Problem” of Black Intimacy (2016) (23)
- The Political Life of Black Motherhood (2018) (20)
- Black Maternal Aesthetics (2019) (19)
- Writing Black Beauty (2019) (19)
- On Difficulty: Intersectionality as Feminist Labor (2010) (17)
- Saidiya Hartman. Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments: Intimate Histories of Social Upheaval. (2020) (16)
- Theorizing Pleasure: New Directions in Black Feminist Studies (2012) (13)
- Race, Pornography, and Desire: A TBS Roundtable (2016) (10)
- Strange Intimacies (2020) (9)
- A New Genealogy of “Intelligent Rage,” or Other Ways to Think about White Women in Feminism (2021) (7)
- Disruptions in Respectability: A Roundtable Discussion (2016) (6)
- Citational Desires: On Black Feminism's Institutional Longings (2021) (5)
- Birthing Black Mothers: Birth Work and the Making of Black Maternal Political Subjects (2019) (5)
- The institutional lives of intersectionality (2015) (5)
- Practicing Love (2020) (4)
- 2020 Keywords Symposium (2022) (3)
- Birthing Black Mothers (2021) (3)
- Black sexualities (2018) (2)
- Black Feminine Enigmas, or Notes on the Politics of Black Feminist Theory (2020) (2)
- Theorizing Race, Theorizing Racism: New Directions in Interdisciplinary Scholarship (2013) (2)
- Teaching about Ferguson: An Introduction (2015) (2)
- Un-disciplining intersectionality (2009) (2)
- A rural perspective: four stories. (2012) (1)
- Solidarity Politics for Millennials: A Guide to Ending the Oppression Olympics . By Ange-Marie Hancock. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. 224p. $85.00. (2012) (1)
- Guest Editor's Introduction: On Pleasure and Death in Black Studies (2020) (1)
- Black Women and Rape: A Review of the Literature (2009) (1)
- National Political Influence and the Catholic Church (2000) (1)
- Feminist Credentials: Notes on the Politics of Women's Studies Graduate Certificates (2018) (1)
- On the beginning of the world: dominance feminism, afropessimism and the meanings of gender (2021) (1)
- Book Review: Sex and Harm in the Age of Consent, by Joseph J. Fischel (2017) (1)
- The Seasonal Incidence of Typhoid Fever and of Diarrhœa (1)
- SOME POINTS IN THE PREVENTION OF EPIDEMIC DIARRH$OElig;A. (1)
- Review of Intersectionality: An Intellectual History by Ange-Marie Hancock (2016) (1)
- Two Beyond Antagonism: Rethinking Intersectionality, Transnationalism, and the Women’s Studies Academic Job Market (2021) (1)
- Then and Now: Women of Color Originalism and the Anthological Impulse in Women's and Gender Studies (2022) (0)
- Slow Loss (2022) (0)
- 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)” (2021) (0)
- The Promise of Repair: VBACs and Contemporary Feminist Political Desire (2022) (0)
- True enough :: a phenomenology of knowing in the process of becoming a therapist. (1991) (0)
- Race-Pleasures: Sexworld and the Ecstatic Black Female Body (2014) (0)
- Black Lactation Aesthetics: Remaking the Natural in Lakisha Cohill's Photographs (2022) (0)
- Beyond Antagonism: (2021) (0)
- On Refusal: Racial Promises and the Silver Age Screen (2014) (0)
- Sarah Knott. Mother Is a Verb: An Unconventional History. (2021) (0)
- The thinking body : a feminist perspective on Melanie Klein's psychology of knowledge. (1998) (0)
- THE ETIOLOGY OF SUMMER DIARRHŒA. (0)
- Archives of Pain: Reading the Black Feminist Theoretical Archive (2014) (0)
- Preface (2017) (0)
- Preface (2015) (0)
- Intimate Justice: The Black Female Body and the Body Politic. By Shatema Threadcraft. New York: Oxford University Press, 2016. (2019) (0)
- Practicing Love: Black Feminism, Love-Politics, and Post-Intersectionality (2021) (0)
- Beyond Antagonism (2021) (0)
- National Political Influe nce and the Catholic Church (2000) (0)
- The Language Through Which Black Feminist Theory Speaks (2021) (0)
- The Routledge Companion to Intersectionalities (2023) (0)
- Feminist Commemoration (2022) (0)
- Reprint of Strange Bedfellows: Black Feminism and Antipornography Feminism (2015) (0)
- The Afterlife of Reproductive Slavery: Biocapitalism and Black Feminism’s Philosophy of History (2021) (0)
- Speaking Sex/Speaking Race: Lialeh and the Blax-porn-tation Aesthetic (2014) (0)
- Object Lessons at 10: a conversation (2022) (0)
- 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)” (2021) (0)
- Laughing Matters: Race-Humor on the Pornographic Screen (2014) (0)
- Masochistic Feminism, or Reflections on the White Feminist Industrial Complex (2023) (0)
- Stories that Matter Now: Feminist Classics & Feminist Desire in the Contemporary Classroom (2020) (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Jennifer Christine Nash?
Jennifer Christine Nash is affiliated with the following schools: