Transatlantic Disbelonging: Unruliness, Pleasure, and Play in Nigerian Diasporic Women's Art

Author:   Bimbola Akinbola
Publisher:   Duke University Press
ISBN:  

9781478032533


Pages:   200
Publication Date:   14 October 2025
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Transatlantic Disbelonging: Unruliness, Pleasure, and Play in Nigerian Diasporic Women's Art


Overview

In Transatlantic Disbelonging, Bimbola Akinbola redirects the focus in diaspora studies from questions of loss and longing to acts of unapologetic self-definition through the study of Nigerian diasporic women artists navigating disparate geographies, allegiances, and identities. Drawing on the work of contemporary visual and performance artists, experimental filmmakers, and writers - including Wura-Natasha Ogunji, Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Zina Saro-Wiwa, ruby onyinyechi amanze, and Nnedi Okorafor - Akinbola articulates how these artists use their experiences as cultural outsiders to redefine home and national belonging on their own terms. Taking a capacious interdisciplinary approach, she explores how these women employ anti-respectability, taboo, the erotic, and play to challenge oppressive colonial legacies and expectations pertaining to gender and morality. For the artists in this book, their artmaking is a form of homemaking that embraces ambivalence and reinvents alienation as possibility. Theorizing these practices as acts of “disbelonging,” Akinbola radically reimagines diasporic identity formation, illustrating how artists use creative practices to enact and embody belonging and community in expansive ways.

Full Product Details

Author:   Bimbola Akinbola
Publisher:   Duke University Press
Imprint:   Duke University Press
Weight:   0.445kg
ISBN:  

9781478032533


ISBN 10:   1478032537
Pages:   200
Publication Date:   14 October 2025
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Preface vii Acknowledgments xi Introduction. Disbelonging: A Strategy for Our Collective Survival 1 1. Nostalgic Longing and Unruly Return in the Art of Wura-Natasha Ogunji 27 2. Ambivalent Interracial Longing in I Always Face You, Even When It Seems Otherwise (2012), Thread (2012), The Bridge (2010), and Re-branding My Love (2011) 61 3. Erotic Agency and African Intimacy in the Work of Zina Saro-Wiwa 83 4. Queer Diasporic Girlhood in The Adventures of Ada the Alien and Akata Witch 105 Conclusion. Redefining Belonging vis-À-vis Tethering 137 Notes 149 Bibliography 161 Index

Reviews

""Highlighting the complexity of Nigerian identity, Transatlantic Disbelonging collaborates with artists and writers to create a book that is simultaneously groundbreaking and devastatingly beautiful. An interdisciplinary, multimethod tour de force that thinks through national belonging and diasporic homemaking, the book addresses the need to center queer desires in African visual and literary culture. Nuanced, innovative, and poetic, Transatlantic Disbelonging brilliantly outlines vibrant, indigenous world-making practices that emerge out of new relationalities between black artists, spirit, and the precarious environment we live in.""--Hershini Bhana Young, author of Falling, Floating, Flickering: Disability and Differential Movement in African Diasporic Performance ""This innovative and poetic book makes a strong case for paying more attention to how artists in the diaspora use their artistic practices to effectively navigate their in-betweenness and queer notions of what constitutes 'home.' Bimbola Akinbola shows how Nigerian women artists refute the prototypical narrative of so-called tragic 'return' and instead reframe their displacement as an opportunity to create queer communities and refuse to be silenced by notions of what an artist, particularly a Nigerian woman, can represent or perform in public spaces.""--Uri McMillan, author of Mavericks of Style: The Seventies in Color


Author Information

Bimbola Akinbola is Assistant Professor of Performance Studies at Northwestern University.

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