Billie’s Bent Elbow: Exorbitance, Intimacy, and a Nonsensuous Standard
Deeply informed by jazz, Billie's Bent Elbow (Stanford, 2025) explores the nonsensical and nonsensuous in black radical thought and expression. Extending the encounter between black study, Frankfurt School critical theory, and sound studies staged in her first book, Jazz as Critique (2018), and, crucially, bringing Yoruba aesthetics into the conversation, Fumi Okiji (Rhetoric) attunes to various sites of intemperance and equivocation in thought and music.
Billie's Bent Elbow eschews the parsimonious tendencies of the Western philosophical tradition, in its contribution to a shared project of improvised correspondence that finds its criticality in its heterophony of approach and intention. The book ranges from Haitian revolutionaries' rendition of "La Marseillaise," to Cecil Taylor's synesthetic poetics, to Billie Holiday's undulating arm. What's more, by way of her intense fascination with these sites of fantastic noise, Okiji brings our attention to a galaxy of intimacies that flash up in her experiments in array and correspondence. The nonsensuous standard Okiji cultivates in this musical and essayistic book, in concert with a host of theorists, musicians and artists, is as much a statement of non-citizenry as it is preparation for intoxicated gathering.