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Ursinus College Guest Lecturer Discusses Comedians' Drag Portrayals of African-American Women

Rachel Jessica Daniel, American Studies doctoral candidate
and Instructor at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, will visit campus
as the African-American/Africana Studies guest lecturer on Oct. 22 at 7 p.m. in
Pfahler Hall’s Musser Auditorium. The title of her talk, which is free and open
to the public, is “Dragging the Black Church: Tyler Perry, Steve Harvey, and
Rickey Smiley Perform Black Women.”
The following day, Oct. 23, at Unity House,
an open discussion will be held with Daniel from 12 to 1 p.m. about the
interdisciplinary nature of her research and questions it raises.



Daniel is a 2006 Ursinus graduate, and her lecture is drawn
from her dissertation, “Resurrecting the Black Church: Representations of the
Black Church in a Post Civil Rights Movement Era.” It will unpack cultural
production as practiced by Tyler Perry, who is known for his comedic drag
representations of African-American working-class women. Perry, a writer,
director, actor and comedian, has become a significant shaper of contemporary
popular culture and is the most prominent of three comedians who cover this
terrain. Daniel writes, “dragging the black church is a performative gesture
that performers use to playfully define black church culture. Drag is a tool
that Steve Harvey, Rickey Smiley and Tyler Perry use in order to make claims
about race, gender, class, and theology.”
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