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Sikivu Hutchinson

    Sikivu Hutchinson est une auteure et dramaturge dont les œuvres explorent les intersections de la race, du genre et de la politique. Son écriture aborde souvent les aspects négligés de la culture américaine et du paysage religieux. Hutchinson excelle dans l'examen de thèmes marginaux, offrant des commentaires perspicaces sur la manière dont les structures sociales façonnent nos vies et nos croyances. Son œuvre incite à la contemplation des complexités de l'identité et de l'appartenance dans la société contemporaine.

    White Nights, Black Paradise
    Imagining transit
    Rock 'n' Roll Heretic: The Life and Times of Rory Tharpe
    • Set in the late 1970s, the story follows Rory Tharpe, an ex-Pentecostal Black female electric guitarist, as she battles the challenges of the corporate rock scene alongside her all-male band. Struggling with the industry's racism, sexism, and ageism, Rory reluctantly teams up with Jude Justis, a white blues-rock star known for appropriating Black music. Their journey also leads Rory to confront her past with Divinity Mason Mulvaney, a controversial pastor. This narrative pays tribute to pioneering guitarist Rosetta Tharpe while exploring themes of power, heartbreak, and resilience in a segregated music industry.

      Rock 'n' Roll Heretic: The Life and Times of Rory Tharpe
    • Imagining transit

      • 227pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      4,3(7)Évaluer

      Using an analysis of the history of Los Angeles's streetcar and highway systems, Sikivu Hutchinson argues that the cultural geography of transportation has had a compelling influence upon the construction of race, gender, and urban subjectivity in the postmodern city. She highlights the influence of American anti-urbanism upon visions of the city during the Great Migration and World War II eras. Proceeding from the premise that the creation of city spaces are informed by collective cultural memory, Hutchinson explores how the decline of public transportation and the rise of the automobile have shaped African American communities and cultures in Los Angeles.

      Imagining transit
    • White Nights, Black Paradise

      • 334pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      Focusing on the lives of three fictional Black women, this novel explores their divergent journeys within the Peoples Temple movement leading to the tragic events in Jonestown. Hy seeks spirituality, Taryn investigates the church's finances, and Ida exposes its corruption through journalism. The narrative examines themes of complicity, resistance, and the quest for social justice, while situating the Peoples Temple within the broader context of civil rights, feminism, and Black struggle. It offers a poignant reflection on the intersection of faith and American democracy.

      White Nights, Black Paradise