Quotes
“Bailey has written a powerful book that explores the reach and impact of her groundbreaking idea—misogynoir. She centers her analysis on what she calls the margins of Black womanhood, illustrating both the many ways misogynoir has negatively shaped the life chances of Black women, and the many ways cis, queer, and trans Black women and nonbinary, agender, and gender-variant Black folks are using digital tools to resist harm, define their complexity, and create new narratives of Black women’s lives, health, and futures. Misogynoir Transformed is an important Black queer feminist text that implores us to think differently and expansively about Black women, resistance, and power in the twenty-first century.” Cathy J. Cohen, author of Democracy Remixed
“Misogynoir Transformed is a resounding, deftly reported manifesto centering the work of transformative Black women seeking one another in a culture that refuses to see us and center us. Moya Bailey reminds us that we are our liberators and have always had the tools to seek, see, and celebrate ourselves.” Janet Mock, New York Times bestselling author
“Misogynoir Transformed is meticulously researched and an extraordinary example of Black feminist studies as an interdisciplinary project. It is brilliant in its exploration of the ways in which Black women, especially queer, nonbinary, agender, gender-variant, and trans women resist misogynoir in various media in their roles as “digital alchemists.” The book underscores the urgency of reimagining how we define women’s social movements given the use of social media platforms among Black women and girls in their mitigation of misogynoir.” Beverly Guy-Sheftall, editor of Words of Fire
“Bailey’s arguments about the Internet as a worldbuilding and alchemical address to misogynoir—the overlapping harms that queer and nonconforming black women confront as part of the price of living their lives—are strong and compelling, especially when supported by data about mortality and police violence, domestic violence, and mental health among the LGBTQ community. Misogynoir Transformed shows how queer black women have created their own health resources online to fill in the deficiencies created by racism, sexism, and homophobia.” Lisa Nakamura, author of Digitizing Race