


Male Daughters, Female Husbands – by Ifi Amadiume.There are so many more authors I could add to this list, but I also wanted to only recommend books that I have read myself. This book was extremely eye-opening for me when it came to understanding racism, the internet, and online spaces.Īt the end of Love Songs Jeffers’ writes about some of the books that inspired her writing, and while some of these books are mentioned, I used Jeffers’ writing as inspiration for the list below.

I also wanted to include some more tech-driven critical thinking around Blackness too, which is why I’ve included Safia Umoja Noble’s Algorithms of Oppression. Taylor’s notion of ‘body terrorism’ was extremely powerful. The works by Sonya Renee Taylor and Tressie McMillan Cottom were monumental for me to read in terms of understanding the self and the body. There is so much more to this novel than the very short list that I have created below, but I wanted to share with you some of the Black feminist authors I thought of while reading Love Songs.īelow, you will find a collection of authors ranging from authors like Ifi Amadiume, who is an award-winning Nigerian poet, essay writer, and anthropologist, to Wiradjuri (Australian) woman Anita Heiss who is an award-winning fiction author, critical thinker, and soon-to-be playwriter as she debuts her novel turned theatre piece, Tiddas in Australia soon. While I was reading the novel, I kept thinking of different Black thinkers that I have come across in my life that I could also see in parts of Jeffers’ writing. There is so much to take in, and there is so much to think about. It is no secret around here that I absolutely loved Honorée Fanonne Jeffers’s novel The Love Songs of W.E.B.
