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Singing the Landscapes of Queer Self: Gender, Religion, and Community in the Northeastern United States
Barnes and Noble
Singing the Landscapes of Queer Self: Gender, Religion, and Community in the Northeastern United States
Current price: $25.00


Barnes and Noble
Singing the Landscapes of Queer Self: Gender, Religion, and Community in the Northeastern United States
Current price: $25.00
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What can the lived experience of a white, transfemme, queer musician tell us about the intersections of place, queer identity, and embodiment in the late 20th and early 21st century United States?
Raised in a conservative religious household in the Northeastern United States, singer songwriter and music professor
Jessye DeSilva
(she/her/hers) narrates her journey from childhood, exploring how she navigated her adolescence and adulthood as a queer person, poet, musician, academic, and spiritual agnostic.
Traversing religious trauma, eating disorders and body dysmorphia, postsecondary education, and a mid-life return to the music industry,
Jessye
uses recollection, song lyric, and story to examine the intersections of place, queer identity, and embodiment in the late 20th and early 21st century United States.
Tackling themes of identity, isolation, relationships and self-image, this book is ideal reading for students of Queer and LGBT+ Studies, Gender Studies, American Studies, Psychology, Religious Studies, and Music.
Raised in a conservative religious household in the Northeastern United States, singer songwriter and music professor
Jessye DeSilva
(she/her/hers) narrates her journey from childhood, exploring how she navigated her adolescence and adulthood as a queer person, poet, musician, academic, and spiritual agnostic.
Traversing religious trauma, eating disorders and body dysmorphia, postsecondary education, and a mid-life return to the music industry,
Jessye
uses recollection, song lyric, and story to examine the intersections of place, queer identity, and embodiment in the late 20th and early 21st century United States.
Tackling themes of identity, isolation, relationships and self-image, this book is ideal reading for students of Queer and LGBT+ Studies, Gender Studies, American Studies, Psychology, Religious Studies, and Music.