An Ode to Black British Girls: Black British Feminism, Black Girl Surrealism, and Michaela Coel’s <em>Chewing Gum</em>

Authors

  • Jeanelle Kevina Hope Texas Christian University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18146/view.266

Keywords:

Black British Feminism, Afrosurrealism, Black British television

Abstract

This article delves into Michaela Coel’s Chewing Gum, examining how the cultural text builds upon Black feminist media discourse, and intimately grapples with the nuances of Black women’s sexuality while explicitly challenging misogynoir. This work illustrates how Coel is helping develop a Black British cultural aesthetic that centers Black women’s liberation, specifically from an African immigrant perspective, by using satire, all the beauty, pain, and struggles that come with #blackgirlmagic, eccentric adornments, and ‘awkward’ ostentatious characters that at times play into racist images and tropes of Black womanhood to expose the absurdity of life in an anti-Black, sexist, and xenophobic society. In sum, this article understands Coel’s work in Chewing Gum to be Black girl surrealism – the intersection of Afro-surrealism, British dark comedy, and Black feminism.

Author Biography

Jeanelle Kevina Hope, Texas Christian University

Jeanelle K. Hope is an Assistant Professor of Comparative Race and Ethnic Studies at Texas Christian University. She is currently developing a book manuscript on Afro-Asian solidarity in the post-Civil Rights era. Hope’s broader research interests include: Afro-Asian studies, Blacks in the West, Black girlhood, Black art and cultural production, and transnational feminism. Her work has been featured in the American Studies Journal, Amerasia Journal, Essence, and Voices of River City.

Downloads

Published

2021-12-01